Jan 24 2019

Dissertation Defense: Marina Stavrakantonaki

January 24, 2019

11:00 AM - 1:00 PM

Location

Sudsman Room, 6th Floor CUPPA Hall

Address

412 S Peoria Street, Chicago, IL 60607

The Department of Public Administration is pleased to announce the upcoming doctoral dissertation defense:
Candidate:  Marina Stavrakantonaki, PhD in Public Administration
Title: "Effect of a Public Policy Change on Respondent Reporting of Intellectual Disabilities”
Date/Time: Thursday January 24, 2019 11:00 am
Location: UIC Art and Exhibition Hall (AEH)
400 South Peoria St., Chicago, IL 60607, Room 2203

Dissertation Committee:
Dr. Timothy P. Johnson, Chair (UIC-Department of Public Administration)
Dr. Allyson L. Holbrook (UIC-Department of Public Administration)
Dr. Michael D. Siciliano (UIC-Department of Public Administration)
Dr. Lisa K. Sharp (UIC-Department of Pharmacy Systems, Outcomes and Policy)
Dr. Stephen J. Blumberg (National Center for Health Statistics)

*All are welcome to this public defense.*

See below for the Dissertation Abstract.

ABSTRACT

Even minor changes in the wording of a survey question may have important ramifications for measurement quality. I report on legislatively mandated changes in terminology that affected questions in the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) and the effects of those changes on proxy and self-reports of an important condition. I specifically examine changes from use of the term “mental retardation” to “intellectual disability” that were mandated by a law signed by President Obama in October 2010. The wording changes were quickly implemented in the NHIS starting in January 2011. My analyses focus on changes in national prevalence of measures of intellectual disability during the period 2011-2016, compared to 1997-2010, for the population as a whole, and also for demographic subgroups, using multivariate models designed to isolate potential trend changes that can be attributed to the introduction of the revised question wording. Findings evaluate the impact of the 2010 legislation on the continuing estimation of this construct.

Also, I examine how respondents perceive and interpret a variety of terms including “intellectual disability” and “mental retardation,” that may underlie the pattern of findings I have previously observed in the longitudinal NHIS data. Using Amazon’s Mechanical Turk, I collected two rounds of data from a sample of US adults to address these questions. These data address potential effects of both question interpretation and perceived stigma by examining a range of clinical and non-clinical terminology commonly used to describe persons with intellectual disabilities. Employing both quantitative and qualitative methods, I examine evidence regarding two competing hypotheses; that the Rosa’s Law effects are a consequence of (1) differences in perceptions of stigma associated with the terminology employed in these questions, vs. they are a consequence of (2) differences in perceptions of the content domain of the various terms employed. Findings enable us to understand the processes driving the observed differences in reporting that were identified subsequent to the implementation of Rosa’s Law.

Contact

Sharon Hayes

Date posted

Jan 17, 2019

Date updated

Jan 23, 2019