Aquilino W S
Department of Child and Family Studies, University of Wisconsin, Madison 53706, USA.
NIDA Res Monogr. 1997;167:383-415.
This chapter examines the impact of interview privacy on self-reported illicit drug use. In 1991, interviews were completed with an urban-suburban sample of 2,417 adults aged 18 to 45. Results show that the presence of third parties during the interview significantly influences respondents' willingness to reveal illicit drug use. Among married respondents, presence of a spouse resulted in higher reporting of illicit drug use, while the presence of adults other than the spouse had a consistent negative effect on drug use reports. A parent's presence during the interview significantly reduced respondents' willingness to report illicit drug use. The pattern of findings suggests that the direction of effects due to third party presence is linked to two factors: the extent of the third party's knowledge of the information requested, and the degree of personal stake the third party may have in the respondent's answers. The differential impact of privacy by interview mode was also examined. Tests of interactions between privacy and interview mode failed to support the hypothesis that the use of self-administered answer sheets reduces privacy effects compared with interviewer-administered interviews.
本章探讨访谈隐私对自我报告的非法药物使用情况的影响。1991年,对年龄在18至45岁之间的2417名城乡成年人样本进行了访谈。结果表明,访谈过程中第三方的在场会显著影响受访者透露非法药物使用情况的意愿。在已婚受访者中,配偶在场会导致非法药物使用情况的报告率更高,而配偶以外的成年人在场则对药物使用报告有持续的负面影响。访谈过程中父母在场会显著降低受访者报告非法药物使用情况的意愿。研究结果模式表明,第三方在场产生的影响方向与两个因素有关:第三方对所要求信息的了解程度,以及第三方对受访者答案可能具有的个人利害关系程度。还考察了访谈方式对隐私的不同影响。隐私与访谈方式之间的交互作用测试未能支持以下假设:与访谈者主持的访谈相比,使用自行填写的答卷会降低隐私影响。