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View Research by Author - Timothy Triplett

Citation URL: http://www.urban.org/TimothyTriplett


Viewing 1-10 of 13. Most recent posts listed first.Next Page >>

The Role of Faith-Based and Community Organizations in Post-Hurricane Human Services Relief Efforts (Research Report)
Carol J. De Vita, Fredrica D. Kramer, Lauren Eyster, Sam Hall, Petya Kehayova, Timothy Triplett

The events surrounding hurricanes Katrina and Rita in 2005 produced one of the largest disaster responses by nongovernmental, charitable organizations, including both faith-based and community organizations (FBCOs). This report is based on a telephone survey of 202 FBCOs that provided disaster-related human services and in-depth, field-based case studies of eight organizational responses after the hurricanes. The survey findings address what types of services were provided, to whom, and the collaborations used by FBCOs to deliver services. The case studies explore what motivated the response in 2005 and suggest how such efforts might connect with the larger disaster response and human service delivery systems to provide needed services in future disasters (For more information, contact Principal Investigators Carol J. De Vita and Fredrica D. Kramer).

Posted to Web: January 22, 2009Publication Date: December 01, 2008

2008 Massachusetts Health Insurance Survey Methodology Report (Research Report)
Sharon K. Long, Timothy Triplett

The Urban Institute, along with its subcontractor, International Communications Research, conducted the 2008 Massachusetts Health Insurance Survey (HIS) for the Massachusetts Division of Health Care Finance and Policy to obtain information on health insurance coverage and access to and use of health care for the non-institutionalized population in Massachusetts. This report provides information about the methods used to collect and analyze the 2008 HIS data.

Posted to Web: December 26, 2008Publication Date: December 18, 2008

Florida's Medicaid Program: Informed Consumer Choice? (Research Report)
Teresa A. Coughlin, Sharon K. Long, Timothy Triplett

Florida is among the first states to implement Medicaid reform using a competitive consumer choice model. Using data from a 2006-07 survey of Medicaid beneficiaries newly enrolled in Florida’s reform program, in an October volume of Health Affairs, Terri Coughlin, Sharon Long and Tim Triplett and colleagues examine how well Florida Medicaid beneficiaries understood the many changes taking place in Medicaid and their experiences in selecting a health plan. They found significant gaps in beneficiaries’ understanding of major components of the reform. Among others, about 30 percent were not aware they were enrolled in reform and more than half had trouble understanding plan information. Additionally, they found that these problems were not particular to any group but instead were experienced broadly across the full Medicaid population.

Posted to Web: October 29, 2008Publication Date: October 29, 2008

Estimates of the Uninsurance Rate in Massachusetts from Survey Data : Why Are They So Different? (Research Report)
Sharon K. Long, Stephen Zuckerman, Timothy Triplett, Allison Cook, Kate Nordahl, Tracy Siegrist, Cindy Wacks

Researchers from the Urban Institute and the State of Massachusetts explored why existing surveys generate very different estimates of the uninsurance rate in Massachusetts. The surveys they examined are the Current Population Survey (CPS), the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS), the Massachusetts Health Insurance Survey, and the Massachusetts Health Reform Survey (MHRS). This brief described how estimates may vary because of differences in the wording of the insurance questions asked in the surveys, differences in question placement and context within the survey, differences in survey design and fielding strategies, differences in accounting for missing data and other data preparation, and differences in survey fielding time frames. The analysis concludes that there has been no single survey in Massachusetts that is clearly superior across all of these important dimensions.

Posted to Web: September 11, 2008Publication Date: September 11, 2008

Five Questions With Tim Triplett (Five Questions)
Timothy Triplett

In this "Five Question" feature, Tim Triplett, a research methodologist and part of Urban Institute's new Statistical Methods Group, talks about Lessons Learned from the National Survey of America's Families (NSAF). The experience of conducting NSAF demonstrates the necessity of flexibility in survey design. Proxies, incentives, and other survey methodologies are discussed.

Posted to Web: December 11, 2006Publication Date:

Lessons Learned From the National Survey of America's Families (Discussion Papers)
Timothy Triplett, Laura Wherry

The cornerstone of the ANF project was the National Survey of America's Families (NSAF), a survey of the economic, health, and social characteristics of children, adults under the age of 65, and their families. Conducted in 1997, 1999, and 2002 to gather information during each round on more than 100,000 people and more than 40,000 families across the country, the NSAF allowed researchers to watch national trends emerge. This report summarizes the pioneering steps and major accomplishments of the survey methods used to complete the NSAF, while acknowledging key challenges and important lessons for future household surveys.

Posted to Web: December 07, 2006Publication Date:

2002 NSAF Nonresponse Analysis (Methodology Report)
Timothy Triplett

This report focuses on the characteristics of nonrespondents to the 2002 NSAF and assesses the impact of nonreponse on the NSAF statistics. It includes analysis of the effectiveness of the call attempt and refusal conversion strategies across all three rounds of NSAF data collection, providing some insights on how the level of effort affects the quality of the data by reducing nonresponse. This report also includes a sociodemographic comparison of nonrespondents using census block information obtained for 2002 nonrespondents and respondents.

Posted to Web: June 30, 2006Publication Date: June 30, 2006

2002 NSAF Data Editing and Imputation (Methodology Report)
Timothy Triplett

This report focuses on the data editing techniques and imputations that were unique to the 2002 NSAF data processing steps. It is a supplement to the 1997 and 1999 NSAF data editing reports (No. 10 in both series), and does not reiterate the data editing techniques, data processing, and coding guidelines documented in these prior reports.

Posted to Web: July 29, 2005Publication Date: July 29, 2005

2002 NSAF Collection of Papers (Methodology Report)
Natalie Abi-Habib, Tamara Black, Simon Pratt, Adam Safir, Rebecca Steinbach, Timothy Triplett, Kevin Wang, The Westat Group, John Wivagg

This report is a collection of occasional papers on technical issues in the design, implementation, and operation of the 2002 round of the NSAF. It is a companion report to the 1999 methodology series Report No. 7 NSAF Collection of Papers and the 1997 methodology series Report No. 16 NSAF Technical Papers. All the papers in this collection were presented at either the annual May American Association for Public Opinion Research conference or the annual August Joint Statistical Meetings.

Posted to Web: February 04, 2005Publication Date: February 04, 2005

Background Report on the Use and Impact of Food Assistance Programs on Indian Reservations (Research Report)
Kenneth Finegold, Nancy M. Pindus, Laura Wherry, Sandi Nelson, Timothy Triplett, Randolph Capps

This report, prepared for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Economic Research Service, reviews existing data sources and prior research on six programs operated by the Department that provide food assistance to American Indians living on or near reservations. The purpose of the review is to help identify future research needs and opportunities to exploit administrative data systems and recurring national surveys. The programs covered are the Food Distribution Program on Indian Reservations (FDPIR), the Food Stamp Program (FSP), the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC), the National School Lunch Program, the School Breakfast Program, and the Commodity Supplemental Food Program (CSFP). Research topics of continuing importance include the impacts of reservation food assistance on health and nutrition, the characteristics that make nutrition education effective on reservations, the dynamics of program participation, and the contribution of tribal administration to program coordination.

Posted to Web: January 12, 2005Publication Date: January 12, 2005

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