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. 2025 Jan 9:29:101742.
doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2024.101742. eCollection 2025 Mar.

Data impacts of changes in U.S. Census Bureau procedures for race and ethnicity data

Affiliations

Data impacts of changes in U.S. Census Bureau procedures for race and ethnicity data

Elizabeth Arias et al. SSM Popul Health. .

Abstract

Beginning with the 2020 decennial census and the 2020 American Community Survey (ACS), the U.S. Census Bureau implemented changes in question design, data processing, and coding procedures for the race and ethnicity data they collect that appear to have resulted in major data discontinuity. However, the Census Bureau has not released nor plans to release research showing the impact of these changes. We explore the impact of the Census Bureau's procedural changes on the racial and ethnic distributions of the Hispanic (generally and by country of origin) and the American Indian and Alaska Native populations, the two populations most impacted by these changes. We use the 2019 and 2021 one-year ACS public-use microdata and 2019 and 2021 NCHS mortality data to compare racial distributions and estimate and compare select demographic and socioeconomic characteristics, and mortality measures across the two years. Our results show that changes the Census Bureau implemented beginning with the 2020 decennial census and ACS appear to have had a significant impact on the comparability of Census Bureau race and ethnicity data. We find a significant data discontinuity impacting a wide variety of demographic, socioeconomic, and mortality statistics and analyses that rely on U.S. Census Bureau data as input for calculations. To mitigate these effects, methods that bridge race and ethnicity data between pre- and post-2020 census data are needed. Our research brings new attention and clarity to the race and ethnicity data discontinuity in Census Bureau data that started in 2020.

Keywords: Census race coding changes; Census race question; Ethnicity; Hispanic; Latino; Multiple race; Race; Racial population composition; Some Other Race.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Percent of Hispanic Population Coded as White Alone, Some Other Race Alone, or Both by Country of Origin, 2019 vs. 2021. Notes: SOR = Some Other Race. Source: 2019 and 2021 American Community Survey.
Fig. 2
Fig. 2
Percent of Hispanic Population Coded as Black Alone or in Combination with White or Some Other Race by Country of Origin, 2019 vs. 2021. Notes: SOR = Some Other Race. Source: 2019 and 2021 American Community Survey.
Fig. 3
Fig. 3
Distribution of Race Classification in the Hispanic Population, 1980–2021. Notes: All groups are single-race except Two or More Races. AIAN=American Indian and Alaska Native, API = Asian and Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander, SOR=Some Other Race. Beginning with the 2000 decennial census the option of selecting more than one race became available.

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References

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