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This authoritative handbook reviews the most widely-used methods
for studying the use and abuse of alcohol and illegal drugs. Its
thorough coverage spans the range of quantitative, qualitative, and
mixed-method approaches to documenting and measuring the complex
psychological, behavioral, and physical experience of substance
misuse and dependence, to ensure valid, useful results. Experts
discuss special issues and considerations for conducting ethical
research with specialized populations, including youth, inmates,
and the LGBT community. Throughout these chapters, contributors
demonstrate the multidisciplinary nature of substance abuse
research, with emphasis on professional ethics and the critical
role of research in developing best practices and effective policy
for prevention and treatment. Among the topics covered: *
Transdisciplinary research perspective: a theoretical framework for
substance abuse research * Longitudinal methods in substance use
research * Considerations in blending qualitative and quantitative
components in substance abuse research * The use of biological
measures in social research on drug misuse * Using surveys to study
substance use behavior * Applications of GIS to inform substance
abuse research and interventions * Evaluating substance use
prevention and treatment programs Research Methods in the Study of
Substance Abuse is an essential resource for health services and
public health professionals, policymakers, and researchers working
and training in the field of addiction. It encourages the rigor and
understanding necessary to address widespread social and public
health concerns.
This authoritative handbook reviews the most widely-used methods
for studying the use and abuse of alcohol and illegal drugs. Its
thorough coverage spans the range of quantitative, qualitative, and
mixed-method approaches to documenting and measuring the complex
psychological, behavioral, and physical experience of substance
misuse and dependence, to ensure valid, useful results. Experts
discuss special issues and considerations for conducting ethical
research with specialized populations, including youth, inmates,
and the LGBT community. Throughout these chapters, contributors
demonstrate the multidisciplinary nature of substance abuse
research, with emphasis on professional ethics and the critical
role of research in developing best practices and effective policy
for prevention and treatment. Among the topics covered: *
Transdisciplinary research perspective: a theoretical framework for
substance abuse research * Longitudinal methods in substance use
research * Considerations in blending qualitative and quantitative
components in substance abuse research * The use of biological
measures in social research on drug misuse * Using surveys to study
substance use behavior * Applications of GIS to inform substance
abuse research and interventions * Evaluating substance use
prevention and treatment programs Research Methods in the Study of
Substance Abuse is an essential resource for health services and
public health professionals, policymakers, and researchers working
and training in the field of addiction. It encourages the rigor and
understanding necessary to address widespread social and public
health concerns.
Surveys are used extensively in psychology, sociology and business,
as well as many other areas, but they are becoming increasingly
difficult to conduct. Some segments of the population are hard to
sample, some are hard to find, others are hard to persuade to
participate in surveys, and still others are hard to interview.
This book offers the first systematic look at the populations and
settings that make surveys hard to conduct and at the methods
researchers use to meet these challenges. It covers a wide range of
populations (immigrants, persons with intellectual difficulties,
and political extremists) and settings (war zones, homeless
shelters) that offer special problems or present unusual challenges
for surveys. The team of international contributors also addresses
sampling strategies including methods such as respondent-driven
sampling and examines data collection strategies including
advertising and other methods for engaging otherwise difficult
populations.
Covers the latest methodologies and research on international
comparative surveys with contributions from noted experts in the
field Advances in Comparative Survey Methodology examines the most
recent advances in methodology and operations as well as the
technical developments in international survey research. With
contributions from a panel of international experts, the text
includes information on the use of Big Data in concert with survey
data, collecting biomarkers, the human subject regulatory
environment, innovations in data collection methodology and
sampling techniques, use of paradata across the survey lifecycle,
metadata standards for dissemination, and new analytical
techniques. This important resource: Contains contributions from
key experts in their respective fields of study from around the
globe Highlights innovative approaches in resource poor settings,
and innovative approaches to combining survey and other data
Includes material that is organized within the total survey error
framework Presents extensive and up-to-date references throughout
the book Written for students and academic survey researchers and
market researchers engaged in comparative projects, this text
represents a unique collaboration that features the latest
methodologies and research on global comparative surveys.
Surveys are used extensively in psychology, sociology and business,
as well as many other areas, but they are becoming increasingly
difficult to conduct. Some segments of the population are hard to
sample, some are hard to find, others are hard to persuade to
participate in surveys, and still others are hard to interview.
This book offers the first systematic look at the populations and
settings that make surveys hard to conduct and at the methods
researchers use to meet these challenges. It covers a wide range of
populations (immigrants, persons with intellectual difficulties,
and political extremists) and settings (war zones, homeless
shelters) that offer special problems or present unusual challenges
for surveys. The team of international contributors also addresses
sampling strategies including methods such as respondent-driven
sampling and examines data collection strategies including
advertising and other methods for engaging otherwise difficult
populations.
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