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. 2017 Aug;107(8):1290-1294.
doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2017.303834. Epub 2017 Jun 22.

Vocal Timbre and the Classification of Respondent Sex in US Phone-Based Surveys

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Vocal Timbre and the Classification of Respondent Sex in US Phone-Based Surveys

Noah C Riley et al. Am J Public Health. 2017 Aug.

Abstract

Objectives: To characterize the conflict of sex and gender identity variables in the 2014 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) sample and examine how this may affect the administration of sex-related health behavior items to transgender participants.

Methods: We conducted a secondary analysis of the 2014 BRFSS gender identity, sex, and sex-related health behavior variables. Twenty states administered the gender-identity variables (n = 154 062), and 691 respondents identified as transgender in the survey (0.4%). We examined conflict among sex, gender identity, and gender-related variables, and compared conflicting and nonconflicting groups across 4 sociodemographic characteristics.

Results: Nearly one third of respondents (27.8%; n = 171) who identified as transgender received sex-specific items that conflicted with their natal sex, thereby reducing the already small subsample of valid responses. There were no significant differences between conflicting and nonconflicting groups on the basis of region, age, race/ethnicity, or type of interview.

Conclusions: Public health surveys should ask respondents to self-identify their sex and gender identity. Interviewer assumptions of respondents' sex may lead to erroneous collection of sex- and gender-based items, inhibit survey administration, and create problems in data quality.

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Figures

FIGURE 1—
FIGURE 1—
Survey Codebook of Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System Indicating the Demographic Variable for Sex of the Respondent: United States, 2014

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