2006 Adult Asthma Data: Technical Information

Return to 2006 BRFSS main page

Viewing and Printing Tables and Maps

The view option for your browser should be set to the smallest available text size to ensure that columns of numbers are properly formatted and that part of the page is not lost when printing.

Be sure your screen colors are set to True Color (24 bit) or greater so that the colors and shadings on the maps are clearly discernable. Maps are also provided in black and white (B/W) if a color printer is not available. Maps should be printed in landscape orientation.

Tables are provided in both HTML and PDF format. The PDF files will load more quickly, but cannot be used with ADA assisted technology. Tables printed in portrait orientation using Adobe Acrobat may produce more pleasing results than printing the HTML-formatted tables.

BRFSS Questionnaire

In 2006, the BRFSS survey was conducted in all 50 states, the District of Columbia and in two US territories (Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands). Guam did not collect any data.

In each area where interviews are conducted, respondents are randomly selected from noninstitutionalized civilian adults (18 years of age or older) living in households with a telephone BRFSS User’s Guide Cdc-pdf[PDF – 1.7 MB]). Asthma prevalence data are produced from the responses to two asthma questions on the year 2006 BRFSS Core Questionnaire.

Lifetime asthma: Question number 8.1
“Have you ever been told by a doctor, nurse, or other health professional that you had asthma?” (variable name: ASTHMA2)

The calculated variable _LTASTHMA (based on question 8.1) from the public use file was used when creating the tables.

Current asthma: Question number 8.2
If the response to 8.1 was Yes, then question 8.2 was asked: “Do you still have asthma?” (variable name: ASTHNOW)

The calculated variable _CASTHMA (based on questions 8.1 and 8.2) from the public use file was used when creating the tables.

Subgroup tables are based on data from the following questions:

Survey Questions, Variable Names and Codes Used in Subgroup Tables
Survey Question Variable name Codes used
11.17 Indicate sex of respondent sex 1 = male
2 = female
11.1 What is your age? age Grouped into:
18-24, 25-34, 35-44,
45-54, 55-64, 65+
11.2 Are you Hispanic or Latino? hispanc2 1 = yes
2 = no
11.4 Which one or more of the following would you say is your race? _mrace 1 = white
2 = black or African American
3 = Asian
4 = Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander
5 = American Indian, Native Alaskan
6 = other race
7 = multiracial
Responses to 11.2 and 11.4 are used to define race/ethnicity _racegr2 1 = white, non-Hispanic
2 = black, non-Hispanic
3 = other, non-Hispanic
4 = multiracial, non-Hispanic
5 = Hispanic
11.7 What is the highest grade or year of school completed? educa 1,2,3 = <HS graduate
4 = HS graduate
5 = some college
6 = college graduate
11.9 Is your annual household income from all sources: a. Less than $25,000? etc. income2 1,2 = <$15,000
3,4 = $15,000-$24,999
5,6 = $25,000-$49,999
7 = $50,000-$74,999
8 = $75,000+

Survey Design and Sample Weights

The survey design is described in the technical pages document, entitled, “2006 Overview” at http://www.cdc.gov/brfss/annual_data/annual_2006.htm. Sample weights are assigned, according to BRFSS methodology, to the variable _FINALWT as described in the BRFSS Weighting Formula.

Data Analysis

Data Used:

The BRFSS 2006 Survey Data file was used to calculate estimates for all states.

Software:

Prevalence and standard error estimates were calculated using SUDAAN Release 9.0.1 (Research Triangle Institute, P.O. Box 12194, Research Triangle Park, NC 27709).

Data Management:

Only respondents with values of the variables as described in the table above are included in each prevalence table. Responses of “don’t know/not sure,” “refused,” or missing values were excluded.

Ratio of Adult Self-Reported Current to Lifetime Asthma by State:

The ratio is a survey-based estimate of prevalence of asthma based on those surveyed who responded “Yes” to question 8.1, “Did a doctor ever tell you that you had asthma?” It is not a rate ratio.

Confidence Intervals:

The 95% Confidence Intervals were calculated using the following formulae:

Lower 95% Confidence Interval = % prevalence – t (sep)
Upper 95% Confidence Interval = % prevalence + t (sep)

Where sep is the standard error of the prevalence percent and t equals the z distribution value of 1.96 for state level prevalence in Table 1. For other tables with smaller sample sizes due to the use of demographic subcategories, the exact value from the t distribution appropriate to the sample size for the percent prevalence was used instead of the approximate z-value of 1.96. Because of the use of the more exact t-value, 95% Confidence Intervals in the tables may differ slightly from those presented in other representations of these data.

Table Conventions:

The “US Total” line of each table excludes Puerto Rico, Guam and the Virgin Islands. “US Total,” therefore, designates an estimate for the 50 states and the District of Columbia combined.

In the tables, states are listed in Federal Information Processing Standard (FIPS) code order.

Washington, D.C., is omitted from the maps. Its area is so small that the map colors and patterns were not discernible.

Ranges in all maps (both overall and for subgroups) are based on quintiles of the overall prevalence estimates from year 2000 data. These same ranges will be used in future years to facilitate year-to-year comparison of the maps.

Chart:

The chart presents the state and territory prevalence percents from Table 1 sorted from high to low. Confidence intervals are also represented graphically for each prevalence value. Overlapping confidence intervals for two states is a rough indication that state prevalence values are not significantly different from one another

Small Sample Size

When sample sizes in cells are less than 50, as they are in some of the subgroup tables, the standard error may be large relative to the prevalence value, leading to a wide 95% confidence interval. Caution should be used in interpreting such “imprecise” estimates of prevalence.

Also, when one or more of the following situations occurred, the indicated solutions were applied:

Possible Situations and the Solutions
Situation Solution
1. The normal distribution approximation to the binomial distribution did not apply. 1. Values for the standard error and the 95% confidence interval were not provided.
2. If the normal distribution approximation does apply, it is appropriate to use values of the t-distribution to compute confidence intervals. 2. Two-sided 95% confidence interval values from the t-distribution with (n-1) degrees of freedom (where n is the number of observations for the subgroup) were used.
3. The lower limit of the 95% confidence interval was negative. 3. The lower limit was set to zero.
Page last reviewed: April 24, 2009