Reduced Access to Care

RANDS during COVID-19

The Research and Development Survey (RANDS) is a platform designed for conducting survey question evaluation and statistical research. RANDS is an ongoing series of surveys from probability-sampled commercial survey panels used for methodological research at the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS). RANDS estimates are generated using an experimental approach that differs from the survey design approaches generally used by NCHS, including possible biases from different response patterns and sampling frames as well as increased variability from lower sample sizes. Use of the RANDS platform allows NCHS to produce more timely data than would be possible using traditional data collection methods. RANDS is not designed to replace NCHS’ higher quality, core data collections. Below are experimental estimates of reduced access to healthcare for three rounds of RANDS during COVID-19. Data collection for the three rounds of RANDS during COVID-19 occurred between June 9, 2020 and July 6, 2020, August 3, 2020 and August 20, 2020, and May 17, 2021 and June 30, 2021. Information needed to interpret these estimates can be found in the Technical Notes.

RANDS during COVID-19 included questions about unmet care in the last 2 months during the coronavirus pandemic. Unmet needs for health care are often the result of cost-related barriers. The National Health Interview Survey, conducted by NCHS, is the source for high-quality data to monitor cost-related health care access problems in the United States. For example, in 2018, 7.3% of persons of all ages reported delaying medical care due to cost and 4.8% reported needing medical care but not getting it due to cost in the past year. However, cost is not the only reason someone might delay or not receive needed medical care. As a result of the coronavirus pandemic, people also may not get needed medical care due to cancelled appointments, cutbacks in transportation options, fear of going to the emergency room, or an altruistic desire to not be a burden on the health care system, among other reasons. The Household Pulse Survey, an online survey conducted in response to the COVID-19 pandemic by the Census Bureau in partnership with other federal agencies including NCHS, also reports estimates of reduced access to care during the pandemic (beginning in Phase 1, which started on April 23, 2020). The Household Pulse Survey reports the percentage of adults who delayed medical care in the last 4 weeks or who needed medical care at any time in the last 4 weeks for something other than coronavirus but did not get it because of the pandemic.

The experimental estimates on this page are derived from RANDS during COVID-19 and show the percentage of U.S. adults who were unable to receive medical care (including urgent care, surgery, screening tests, ongoing treatment, regular checkups, prescriptions, dental care, vision care, and hearing care) in the last 2 months.

RANDS Topics

Use the drop-down menus to show data for selected reduced access to care indicators by groups (age, race and Hispanic origin, sex, education, urbanization, and chronic conditions).


Technical Notes

Data Source

The National Center for Health Statistics’ (NCHS) Division of Research and Methodology (DRM) contracted with NORC at the University of Chicago (NORC) to conduct the Research and Development Survey (RANDS) during COVID-19. RANDS during COVID-19 included three rounds of data collection (Round 1, Round 2, and Round 3). The RANDS survey for each round was conducted in English using web and telephone administration where survey administration mode was determined by the preference of the panelists. The samples for this study were drawn from NORC’s AmeriSpeak® Panel (amerispeak.norc.orgexternal icon) using a stratified sample design to obtain a random, representative sample of U.S. adults aged 18 and over, where sampling strata were defined by race and Hispanic origin (grouped by 1) Hispanic, 2) black non-Hispanic, and 3) white non-Hispanic or other non-Hispanic), age group (18–34 years, 35–49 years, 50–64 years, and 65 years and over), sex (male or female), education (Associate’s degree/some college or less and Bachelor’s degree or above), and annual household income (less than $75,000 and more than $75,000). NORC performed sampling independently within each of the 96 strata using simple random sampling. Rounds 1 and 2 of RANDS during COVID-19 had a longitudinal design. Sampled panelists were invited to participate in both rounds of the study. For these two rounds, NORC excluded panelists recruited in 2019 from the sampling to improve the cumulative response rate of the study as a nonresponse follow up was not conducted that year. RANDS during COVID-19 Round 3 was designed to evaluate a telephone oversample (see completion rate by mode for each round below) and panelists were sampled independently from Rounds 1 and 2. To meet the target number of completed surveys, Round 3 included panelists recruited to the AmeriSpeak Panel in 2019 and 2020.

In Round 1, NORC invited 8,663 randomly selected panelists to participate in RANDS between June 9, 2020 and July 6, 2020. At the completion of Round 1, 6,800 interviews were completed for an overall completion rate of 78.5%. Of the 6,800 completed interviews, 6,390 (94.0%) were completed via web administration and 410 (6.0%) were completed via telephone. In Round 2, NORC invited 8,651 of the panelists from Round 1 to participate in Round 2 of RANDS during COVID-19. Responses were collected from August 3, 2020 to August 20, 2020. At the completion of Round 2, 5,981 interviews were completed for an overall completion rate of 69.1%. Of the 5,981 completed interviews, 5,559 (92.9%) were completed via web administration and 422 (7.1%) were completed via telephone. Overall, 5,452 panelists participated in both Rounds 1 and 2. In Round 3, NORC invited 7,852 panelists who were sampled independently from the previous two rounds to participate between May 17, 2021 and June 30, 2021. At the completion of Round 3, 5,458 interviews were completed for an overall completion rate of 69.5%. Of the 5,458 completed interviews, 4,181 (76.6%) were completed via web administration and 1,277 (23.4%) were completed via telephone.

 

Survey Questions

The questionnaire included questions to assess U.S. adults’ loss of work due to illness with COVID-19, use of telemedicine, and access to healthcare during the COVID-19 pandemic. Questions related to reduced access to care evaluated the ability of U.S. adults to receive selected types of medical care for any reason and due to the Coronavirus pandemic in the past 2 months. Survey questions on RANDS related to this topic included the following:

 

Reduced Access to Care

In the last two months, were you unable to get any of the following types of care for any reason— urgent care for an accident or illness, a surgical procedure, diagnostic or medical screening test, treatment for an ongoing condition, a regular check-up, prescription drugs or medications, dental care, vision care, or hearing care?

The estimates reported are the percentage unable to receive any of the specified types of care for any reason, including the coronavirus pandemic, in the last 2 months among all adults. The percentages for reduced access to a specific type of care for any reason are compared to all other adults, including those who received the specified care or who did not seek the specified care.

 

Were you unable to get this because of the coronavirus pandemic?

The estimates reported are the percentage unable to receive any of the specified types of care in the last 2 months due to the pandemic among all adults. The percentages for reduced access for a specific type of care due to the pandemic are compared to all other adults, including those who received the specified care, did not seek the specified care, or did not receive the care for a reason other than the pandemic.

 

Weighting and Estimation

NORC provided sample weights for each round of RANDS during COVID-19 which account for the sample design and are calibrated to U.S. population counts to account for differential nonresponse and under coverage of some groups on the sample frame. The sample weights developed by NORC were based on the panel weights from the AmeriSpeak® Panel and the RANDS survey-specific sampling weights for each round. The panel weights account for the sampling probability from the AmeriSpeak® Panel, calculated as the inverse probability of selection from the NORC National Sample Frame, which are adjusted for nonresponse and for a subsample of housing units that have a nonresponse follow-up. These panel weights are adjusted using raking to align the panel weights with external population totals obtained from the U.S. Census Bureau Current Population Survey (CPS). From the panel weights, the RANDS survey-specific sampling weights are derived using the probability of selection into RANDS associated with a sampled panel member and an adjustment for nonresponse to the RANDS survey. The RANDS survey-specific sampling weights for each round of RANDS during COVID-19 are raked to adult population totals, trimmed for extreme weights, and raked again to the same population totals to form the final NORC-provided sample weights.

NCHS implemented an additional weighting step to calibrate the NORC-provided weights to the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS), an established core household survey conducted by NCHS. NORC-provided sample weights for each round were adjusted through an additional post-stratification step in which the marginal totals of RANDS from each round were raked to the marginal population totals from the NHIS. RANDS during COVID-19 Rounds 1 and 2 weights were raked using the 2018 NHIS sample adult file (n = 25,417) on the following demographic and health characteristics: age, sex, race and Hispanic origin, education, household income, Census region, marital status, ever diagnosed high cholesterol, ever diagnosed asthma, ever diagnosed hypertension, and ever diagnosed diabetes. RANDS during COVID-19 Round 3 weights were raked using the 2019 NHIS sample adult file (n = 31,997) on the following demographic and health characteristics: age, sex, race and Hispanic origin, education, household income, Census region, marital status, ever diagnosed high cholesterol, ever diagnosed asthma, ever diagnosed hypertension, ever diagnosed diabetes, metropolitan status, and phone service. Characteristics with missing values in RANDS and in NHIS were included in the raking procedure, while characteristics with missing values in one of the surveys were removed for the raking step with an adjustment on the weights for the non-missing values. The calibrated weights were proportionally adjusted to the total number of RANDS respondents for each round (n = 6,800 for Round 1, n = 5,981 for Round 2, and n = 5,458 for Round 3).

All analyses reported are based on the NCHS calibrated sample weights for the respective round. It is important to note that RANDS during COVID-19 is a probability-sampled panel survey. Although the NORC-provided sample weights are designed to provide nationally representative estimates, the additional calibration further adjusts the RANDS data for differences in health and demographic factors between RANDS and NHIS due to possible differences in response propensities, coverage, and sample variability. The application of sample weights to the data is required to produce results with meaningful population representativeness and to accurately assess the sampling error of statistics based on the survey data.

For each outcome reported, the sample size, percentage estimate, and standard error estimate are shown by round. Standard error estimates were generated using a Taylor series linearization approach. SUDAAN’s PROC CROSSTAB was used to calculate all estimates. PROC CROSSTAB accounts for the complex survey design variables, including the sampling strata and sampling weights. The MISSUNIT option in SUDAAN was used to account for singleton primary sampling units in the variance estimation for the reported standard error estimates and statistical testing. Missing values were excluded from the reported estimates. Estimates that did not meet the NCHS Data Presentation Standards for Proportions were suppressed (https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/series/sr_02/sr02_175.pdfpdf icon).

Each set of estimates is reported for the total overall (at the national level) and by selected factors including demographics and diagnosed chronic conditions. Selected factors included age group (18–44 years, 45–64 years, and 65 years and over), race and Hispanic origin (white non-Hispanic, black non-Hispanic, other non-Hispanic, Hispanic), sex (male or female), education (high school graduate or less, some college, Bachelor’s degree or above), urbanization (metropolitan or non-metropolitan), and chronic conditions (one or more chronic conditions, ever diagnosed diabetes, ever diagnosed hypertension, or current diagnosed asthma). For subgroup analyses, sex is identified by the response to the survey item “Please tell us your gender.” Urbanization is assigned by zip code, where metropolitan includes metropolitan and micropolitan areas and non-metropolitan includes all other designations. One or more chronic conditions is defined as a diagnosis of one or more of the following: hypertension, also called high blood pressure; high cholesterol; coronary heart disease; current asthma; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), emphysema, or chronic bronchitis; cancer or a malignancy of any kind; or diabetes excluding pre-diabetes and borderline diabetes. Estimates are accompanied by bar charts displaying comparisons within the selected factors between the three rounds.

 

Comparisons between Rounds

Reported statistical testing results identify statistically significant differences in the experimental estimates between rounds (Rounds 1 and 2, Rounds 1 and 3, Rounds 2 and 3). Since the sampled panelists from Round 1 of RANDS during COVID-19 were also invited to participate in Round 2, the percentage estimates for the selected indicators are not independent. Of the 6,800 respondents to Round 1 and 5,981 respondents to Round 2, 5,452 panelists participated in both rounds. To account for the correlation in the repeated measurements, point estimates provided for Rounds 1 and 2 were statistically compared using an unpaired correlated two-sample t-test. The variance of the difference between point estimates was approximated using the variance of the estimates from Rounds 1 and 2 and a correction factor to account for the sample of panelists responding to both rounds. The correction factor incorporated the design effects from both rounds and estimated correlation using the weighted Pearson correlation coefficient. Correction factors were estimated separately for each indicator within subgroups. Correlations between rounds differed by indicator and for categories within subgroups. The resulting test statistic was assumed to be approximately normally distributed.

Statistical testing between Round 1 and 3 estimates and Round 2 and 3 estimates was performed using a survey regression approach. Data from the comparison rounds were parameterized using a reference cell model to estimate the mean difference and the standard error of the difference of the two estimates while accounting for the covariance of the estimates in clustered samples. Note that while the covariance of two estimates for distinct samples is zero under simple random sampling, the covariance of two estimates may be nonzero for clustered samples. The statistical testing for differences between Round 1 and 3 estimates and Round 2 and 3 estimates was also validated to verify that findings of statistically significant differences were not impacted by the change in the reference dataset (2018 NHIS for Rounds 1 and 2, 2019 NHIS for Round 3) for the raking step to produce the NCHS calibrated sample weights.

The reported significance for all three comparisons is based on a two-sided test with a significance level of 0.05 and does not account for multiple comparisons. Significance testing was not reported in cases where either of the estimates in the comparison rounds was suppressed.

 

Limitations and Data Use

The information presented here is based on data collected by commercial vendors that maintain groups of respondents, called panels, who agree to participate in surveys, typically in exchange for payment or prizes. Panel surveys can be implemented much quicker and can be less expensive to conduct than typical NCHS surveys that draw new samples from nationally representative frames and collect information by phone, online, or in person. Panel surveys also have more sample bias and less accuracy, than traditional survey methods.

RANDS is an ongoing NCHS research program designed to investigate whether and, if so, how panels with more biases can be used in conjunction with other, higher quality data collections to increase the scope of information collected, the timeliness of data collection and the sample size, and to expand the scope and granularity of NCHS statistical products. The RANDS was not designed to replace NCHS’ higher quality, core data collections but to be used in conjunction with those surveys especially during periods when standard data collection methods face challenges.

The COVID-19 pandemic offers an opportunity to further explore the collection of new information more quickly than is possible using the Federal Statistical System’s core data collection approaches. Building on past work, NCHS took advantage of the RANDS platform to collect information regarding aspects of the public health emergency not currently being captured in sufficient detail in government or nongovernment surveys. In addition, measurement research that may be instructive for interpreting other federal and non-federal surveys during the pandemic will be conducted and calibration research will continue. Experimental national estimates are only provided for selected variables. The other variables are being collected specifically for research purposes. The experimental national estimates for the inability to work due to illness with COVID-19, telemedicine access before and during the pandemic, telemedicine use during the pandemic, and reduced access to specific types of health care for any reason and due to the pandemic have been calibrated using information from NCHS’ NHIS to correct for some portion of the potential bias in the panel relative to the NHIS, as described above. Information on the effect of calibration for past data collections and for this round of data collection will be presented on the RANDS website. As research is underway to both improve the calibration method and understand potential sources of measurement error, estimates may be updated based on the results of that research. These estimates should be considered experimental. On August 28, 2020, NORC provided a revised file for the Round 1 respondents and the calibrated weights were updated accordingly. The reported estimates reflect this update. In the event of future updates to the weights or the calibration approach, the change will be documented and the tables will be updated accordingly.

Statistically significant differences between experimental estimates from Rounds 1 and 2, Rounds 1 and 3, and Rounds 2 and 3 identified using the reported p-value approach should be interpreted with caution. Small estimated design effects for subgroups may impact the calculated test statistic and the normality assumption may be violated in the case of small sample sizes. The American Statistical Association (ASA) has released a statement on statistical significance based on p-values (https://amstat.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/00031305.2016.1154108external icon). The ASA’s published guidance indicates that the p-value should not be the only factor used when making decisions about scientific findings. NCHS will release a future methodological report with additional details and results from the correlated two-sample t-test and the reference cell regression approach used for statistical testing on the RANDS during COVID-19 published indicators.

Note that a statistical test of the difference between the RANDS during COVID-19 estimates using the published estimates and their standard errors and assuming independence between rounds is conservative for positively correlated estimates and may not identify a statistically significant difference that would be identified if the dependence due to repeated measurements on subjects or due to clustered samples was considered. However, differences between rounds that are identified as statistically significant under the assumption of independence will be significant when accounting for the correlation. Statistical testing results in the published tables accounted for the correlation.

Page last reviewed: August 6, 2021