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A.1 Totals may appear to differ slightly from the apparent sums of their component parts, in cases where they have been calculated by adding up the "unrounded" values of the components and then rounding each figure independently. Similarly, percentages may appear not to sum to 100%.
A.2 The underlying sample numbers shown in different tables may not be the same. This may be because:
A.3 Highest Income Householder: the household reference person for the first part of the interview. This must be a person in whose name the accommodation is owned or rented, or who is otherwise responsible for the accommodation. In households with joint householders, the person with the highest income is taken as the household reference person (if they have exactly the same income, the older is taken as the household reference person).
A.4 Adult: for the purposes of the SHS, an adult is someone who was aged 16 or over at the time of the interview; a child is someone who was aged 15 or under.
A.5 Motor vehicles, cars and vans: when the interviewer asks about the motor vehicles that are normally available for the private use of one or more members of the household, the following types of vehicle are distinguished:
Therefore, vans are excluded from the figures for "cars available for private use" in Table 5 and Section 4. However, when the interviewer asks about the usual means of travel to work and travel to school, the categories which can be recorded include:
so vans are included with cars in the figures in Tables 10 to 13 and Sections 7 and 8.
B The Scottish Household Survey
B.1 Background, and topics covered
B.1.1 The Scottish Household Survey (SHS) started in February 1999. Its principal purpose is to collect information in its three main areas of Transport, Local Government and Social Justice, but other topics are covered, such as household composition, housing and amenities, overcrowding and sharing in housing, employment or unemployment, income, assets and savings, credit and debt, health, disabilities and care, and other topics. The SHS provides the first representative Scottish data on many subjects, such as access to the Internet, daily travel patterns, etc. The Annex lists the topics which have been included since the survey started.
B.1.2 The SHS was needed because the existing surveys which cover such topics are often too infrequent, insufficiently detailed, or based on too small samples to provide reliable information for Scotland (or areas within Scotland). For example, the National Travel Survey's sample includes only about 300 Scottish households per year, so it cannot provide any information about year to year changes in travel patterns, nor can it show how they vary between different parts of Scotland. The Scottish Executive will, initially, fund the SHS for four years: 1999 to 2002 inclusive. The contract for the survey for that period was awarded following a competitive tender. The SHS is conducted jointly by two firms: System Three and MORI Scotland.
B.1.3 Where appropriate, the SHS uses the harmonised concepts and questions for government social surveys which have been developed by the Government Statistical Service, to facilitate comparison with the results of other government surveys. However, differences in sampling and survey methods mean that SHS results will differ from those of other surveys. It must also be remembered that the SHS is not designed to produce statistics on (eg) unemployment or income: it collects such information only for selecting the data for particular groups of people (such as the unemployed or the low-paid) for further analysis, or for use as "background" variables when analysing other topics (such as the means of travel or the frequency of driving).
B.2 Sampling arrangements
B.2.1 The SHS is a continuous cross-sectional survey: interviewing takes place all year round. Each year, about 15,500 households across Scotland are interviewed. The SHS is designed so that the interviews from each quarter will provide results which are representative of Scotland as a whole. In addition, the survey design is such that results will be available for each of the larger local authorities annually, and for all 32 Scottish local authorities, regardless of size, over two years. The SHS design therefore involves drawing a sample which will produce about 31,000 household interviews which are spread over two years. The requirement to produce results for every local authority, regardless of size, after two years, means that higher sampling fractions are used for Council areas with small populations, in order to ensure a minimum of about 550 household interviews in each area over the two years. A reweighting process (described later) ensures that the variation in sampling fractions does not make the results unrepresentative of Scotland as a whole. An "average" Council would have about 1,000 household interviews over the two years. Annual results are available only for the few Councils for which there are sufficient interviews per year. Of course, the smaller the sample upon which the results for a Council are based, the more carefully they will have to be used, and there might be cases where they do not appear sufficiently reliable to be used.
B.2.2 The SHS is intended to be a survey of private households. For the purposes of the survey, a household is defined as one person or a group of people living in accommodation as their only or main residence and either sharing at least one meal a day or sharing the living accommodation. A student's term-time address is taken as his/her "main residence", in order that he/she is counted where he/she lives for most of the year.
B.2.3 The sample was drawn from the Small User file of the Postcode Address File (PAF), which is a listing of all active address points maintained by the Post Office. The Small User file excludes addresses at which an average of more than 25 items of post are delivered per day. (Blocks of flats etc, which have several dwellings at the same address, are not excluded from the Small User file: in such cases, the file's Multiple Occupancy Indicator is used to count each dwelling separately for the selection of the sample.) Therefore, people in certain types of accommodation (such as nurses homes, student halls of residence, hostels for the homeless, other communal establishments, mobile homes, and sites for travelling people) will be excluded from the SHS unless the accommodation is listed on the Small User file of the PAF and it represents the sole or main residence of the people concerned. So, the SHS's target population includes some - but not all - students, for example. People living in bed and breakfast accommodation may be included, if it is listed in the Small User file of the PAF and if it is their sole or main residence. Prisons, hospitals and military bases are excluded.
B.2.4 In order that the sample would be representative of each Council's area, the ten main summary groups of the Scottish MOSAIC geo-demographic indicator were used to define strata within each Council area, and a sample of an appropriate size was then drawn within each stratum within each Council area. Scottish MOSAIC is a neighbourhood classification system developed by Experian. It draws on a large number of Census variables, augmented by some published non-Census information, to distinguish between postcodes in terms of types of housing, housing densities and household characteristics. It uses statistical analysis of variables such as home ownership, car ownership, age, health, employment status and occupation to identify types of neighbourhoods with similar characteristics. All households within a given postcode are regarded as being in the same type of neighbourhood: that to which the postcode as a whole is classified. Further information about MOSAIC can be obtained from Experian (the companys Web site is at www.experian.com).
B.2.5 In the areas of the ten Councils which have the highest population densities, the sample of addresses was drawn at random (within each geo-demographic stratum within each Council) at the start of the two-year period. The resulting addresses were then grouped into batches for allocation as interviewer assignments.
B.2.6 For cost-effectiveness, the design of the sample clustered the interviews in the remaining 22 Councils. Enumeration Districts (EDs) were used as the Primary Sampling Unit. An ED contains, on average, about 150 households. At the start of the two-year period, EDs were selected at random (within each geo-demographic stratum within each Council) with probabilities proportional to their numbers of addresses (taking account of the MOI values and the required variation in sampling fractions between Councils). Then, nearer the time that the interviews in an ED are due to take place, addresses within that ED are selected at random, using the current PAF.
B.3 Interviewing, response rates and reweighting
B.3.1 The survey interviews, which lasted an average of 42 minutes in 1999, are carried out in respondents homes using Computer Aided Personal Interviewing (CAPI) by System Three and MORI Scotland. The interview has two parts. The first part of the interview is carried out with the Highest Income Householder (the household reference person - see section A.4) or his/her spouse or partner. This collects mainly factual information about the composition and characteristics of the household. Some questions are asked in respect of each household member. The second part is with a randomly-chosen adult (aged 16+) member of the household. This focuses more on individual attitudes and behaviours. Often, both parts of the interview are with the same person - this is always the case in a single adult household. The use of the two-part approach means that, after reweighting (and assuming that there are no non-response biases), the results from the first part interviews should be representative of Scottish households, and the results from the second part interviews should be representative of Scottish adults.
B.3.2 The response rate for the first part, after taking account of deadwood in the sample of addresses (such as small shops and offices, and properties which have been demolished or are unoccupied), was 66% for the 1999/2000 two-year "sweep". Among households which participated, the response rate for the "random adult" part of the interview was 94%.
B.3.3 The data are then reweighted to take account of the unequal probabilities of selection inherent in the sample design: the over-sampling (relative to their numbers of households) of the Councils with smaller populations, in order to obtain a minimum number of interviews in each Council; and the under-sampling (relative to their share of the adult population) of adults living in multi-adult households, because only one "random adult" is interviewed in each household. Comparisons with data from other sources, such as the National Travel Survey and the 1996 Scottish House Condition Survey, suggested that the reweighted data are broadly representative of the Scottish household population; consequently, no further weighting has been carried out.
B.4 Published results, and anonymised data
B.4.1 The following SHS publications are available from The Stationery Office Bookshop, and are also available on the SHS website (see section B.5.3):
(a) a detailed Annual Report, which provides many tables of SHS results:
volume
1 - 1999 report - 240 pages, £20 per copy, ISBN 1-84268-026-9
volume 3 - 1999/2000 report - 200 pages, £20 per copy, ISBN 0-7559-0230-0
(b) a Technical Report, which contains information about the survey
procedures (such as the sample design and the method of reweighting), and an
edited version of the questionnaire:
volume 2 - 1999 report - 92 pages,
£15 per copy, ISBN 1-84268-066-8
volume 4 - 1999/2000 report - 96 pages, £15 per copy, ISBN 0-7559-0231-9
B.4.2 This is one of a series of Transport statistical bulletins which provide some Transport-related results from the SHS. The first, Household Transport: some Scottish Household Survey results, was published in January 2001. It provided more detailed analyses of the figures for Scotland for most of the topics covered in this bulletin, and some other topics. For example, it provided information about the variation in car availability by household type, social class, annual net household income, and type of area; and about driving licence possession by age group, sex, current situation, social class, annual net household income and type of area - analyses which are not possible for the data for individual local authorities, because of the small sample size in many Council areas.
B.4.3 SHS results are also included in other Scottish Executive publications, such as Scottish Transport Statistics.
B.4.4 Anonymised copies of the survey data are deposited at the UK Data Archive.
B.5 Enquiries and further information
B.5.1 General enquiries about the SHS should be addressed to the surveys Project Team:
SHS Project Team
Central Research Unit
Scottish Executive
3rd Floor West
St Andrews House
Regent Road
Edinburgh, EH1 3DG
Tel: 0131 244 7557 or 8420
E-mail: shs@scotland.gsi.gov.uk
B.5.2 Enquiries about the statistics in this bulletin should be addressed to:
Frank Dixon
Transport Statistician
Scottish Executive
Victoria Quay
Edinburgh, EH6 6QQ
Tel: 0131 244 7254
Fax: 0131 244 0888
E-mail: transtat@scotland.gsi.gov.uk
B.5.3 Further information about the survey can be found on the SHS website at http://www.scotland.gov.uk/shs
This website provides some background to the survey, information about the progress of the survey, and the published results.
B.5.4 Please contact the Project Team if you wish to be added to an e-mail mailing list to be kept informed of any significant updates to the information on the SHS website. The Project Team will also, on request, distribute paper copies of information about the survey, and about significant developments when they occur, to people who are unable to access the website.
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