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Feasibility of Using a Multilingual Web Survey in Studying the Health of Ethnic Minority Youth

BACKGROUND: Monolingual Web survey is a common tool for studying adolescent health. However, national languages may cause difficulties for some immigrant-origin youths, which lower their participation rate. In national surveys, the number of ethnic minority groups is often too small to assess their...

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Autores principales: Kinnunen, Jaana Maarit, Malin, Maili, Raisamo, Susanna Ulrika, Lindfors, Pirjo Liisa, Pere, Lasse Antero, Rimpelä, Arja Hannele
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications Inc. 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4440897/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25953412
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/resprot.3655
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author Kinnunen, Jaana Maarit
Malin, Maili
Raisamo, Susanna Ulrika
Lindfors, Pirjo Liisa
Pere, Lasse Antero
Rimpelä, Arja Hannele
author_facet Kinnunen, Jaana Maarit
Malin, Maili
Raisamo, Susanna Ulrika
Lindfors, Pirjo Liisa
Pere, Lasse Antero
Rimpelä, Arja Hannele
author_sort Kinnunen, Jaana Maarit
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Monolingual Web survey is a common tool for studying adolescent health. However, national languages may cause difficulties for some immigrant-origin youths, which lower their participation rate. In national surveys, the number of ethnic minority groups is often too small to assess their well-being. OBJECTIVE: We studied the feasibility of a multilingual Web survey targeted at immigrant-origin youths by selection of response language, and compared participation in different language groups with a monolingual survey. METHODS: The Adolescent Health and Lifestyle Survey (AHLS), Finland, with national languages (Finnish/Swedish) was modified into a multilingual Web survey targeted at a representative sample of 14- and 16-year olds (N=639) whose registry-based mother tongue was other than the national languages. The survey was conducted in 2010 (16-year olds) and 2011 (14-year olds). The response rate of the multilingual survey in 2011 is compared with the AHLS of 2011. We also describe the translation process and the e-form modification. RESULTS: Of the respondents, 57.6% answered in Finnish, whereas the remaining 42.4% used their mother tongue (P=.002). A majority of youth speaking Somali, Middle Eastern, Albanian, and Southeast Asian languages chose Finnish. The overall response rate was 48.7% with some nonsignificant variation between the language groups. The response rate in the multilingual Web survey was higher (51.6%, 163/316) than the survey with national languages (46.5%, 40/86) in the same age group; however, the difference was not significant (P=.47). The adolescents who had lived in Finland for 5 years or less (58.0%, 102/176) had a higher response rate than those having lived in Finland for more than 5 years (45.1%, 209/463; P=.005). Respondents and nonrespondents did not differ according to place of birth (Finland/other) or residential area (capital city area/other). The difference in the response rates of girls and boys was nearly significant (P=.06). Girls of the Somali and Middle Eastern language groups were underrepresented among the respondents. CONCLUSIONS: A multilingual Web survey is a feasible method for gathering data from ethnic youth, although it does not necessarily yield a higher response rate than a monolingual survey. The respondents answered more often in the official language of the host country than their mother tongue. The varying response rates by time of residence, ethnicity, and gender pose challenges for developing tempting surveys for youth.
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spelling pubmed-44408972015-06-09 Feasibility of Using a Multilingual Web Survey in Studying the Health of Ethnic Minority Youth Kinnunen, Jaana Maarit Malin, Maili Raisamo, Susanna Ulrika Lindfors, Pirjo Liisa Pere, Lasse Antero Rimpelä, Arja Hannele JMIR Res Protoc Original Paper BACKGROUND: Monolingual Web survey is a common tool for studying adolescent health. However, national languages may cause difficulties for some immigrant-origin youths, which lower their participation rate. In national surveys, the number of ethnic minority groups is often too small to assess their well-being. OBJECTIVE: We studied the feasibility of a multilingual Web survey targeted at immigrant-origin youths by selection of response language, and compared participation in different language groups with a monolingual survey. METHODS: The Adolescent Health and Lifestyle Survey (AHLS), Finland, with national languages (Finnish/Swedish) was modified into a multilingual Web survey targeted at a representative sample of 14- and 16-year olds (N=639) whose registry-based mother tongue was other than the national languages. The survey was conducted in 2010 (16-year olds) and 2011 (14-year olds). The response rate of the multilingual survey in 2011 is compared with the AHLS of 2011. We also describe the translation process and the e-form modification. RESULTS: Of the respondents, 57.6% answered in Finnish, whereas the remaining 42.4% used their mother tongue (P=.002). A majority of youth speaking Somali, Middle Eastern, Albanian, and Southeast Asian languages chose Finnish. The overall response rate was 48.7% with some nonsignificant variation between the language groups. The response rate in the multilingual Web survey was higher (51.6%, 163/316) than the survey with national languages (46.5%, 40/86) in the same age group; however, the difference was not significant (P=.47). The adolescents who had lived in Finland for 5 years or less (58.0%, 102/176) had a higher response rate than those having lived in Finland for more than 5 years (45.1%, 209/463; P=.005). Respondents and nonrespondents did not differ according to place of birth (Finland/other) or residential area (capital city area/other). The difference in the response rates of girls and boys was nearly significant (P=.06). Girls of the Somali and Middle Eastern language groups were underrepresented among the respondents. CONCLUSIONS: A multilingual Web survey is a feasible method for gathering data from ethnic youth, although it does not necessarily yield a higher response rate than a monolingual survey. The respondents answered more often in the official language of the host country than their mother tongue. The varying response rates by time of residence, ethnicity, and gender pose challenges for developing tempting surveys for youth. JMIR Publications Inc. 2015-05-07 /pmc/articles/PMC4440897/ /pubmed/25953412 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/resprot.3655 Text en ©Jaana Maarit Kinnunen, Maili Malin, Susanna Ulrika Raisamo, Pirjo Liisa Lindfors, Lasse Antero Pere, Arja Hannele Rimpelä. Originally published in JMIR Research Protocols (http://www.researchprotocols.org), 07.05.2015. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Research Protocols, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on http://www.researchprotocols.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Original Paper
Kinnunen, Jaana Maarit
Malin, Maili
Raisamo, Susanna Ulrika
Lindfors, Pirjo Liisa
Pere, Lasse Antero
Rimpelä, Arja Hannele
Feasibility of Using a Multilingual Web Survey in Studying the Health of Ethnic Minority Youth
title Feasibility of Using a Multilingual Web Survey in Studying the Health of Ethnic Minority Youth
title_full Feasibility of Using a Multilingual Web Survey in Studying the Health of Ethnic Minority Youth
title_fullStr Feasibility of Using a Multilingual Web Survey in Studying the Health of Ethnic Minority Youth
title_full_unstemmed Feasibility of Using a Multilingual Web Survey in Studying the Health of Ethnic Minority Youth
title_short Feasibility of Using a Multilingual Web Survey in Studying the Health of Ethnic Minority Youth
title_sort feasibility of using a multilingual web survey in studying the health of ethnic minority youth
topic Original Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4440897/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25953412
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/resprot.3655
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