Community Involvement in Survey Process

  1. The one advantage of involving community in the implementation process of a survey is that any external errors pertaining to the survey process can easily be detected. Community members know their community, and can help in preventing irrelevant information that might otherwise exist in the survey process.
  2. One challenge of involving community in the implementation process is that another member behavior can cause survey process to ditch.  Last year, I attended 3-day seminar in a small community in DeKalb, Iowa State. The topic of the seminar was on the health issues of community dysfunction. I was surprised to see how the implementation strategies to improve such community were the result of the community itself. It was the lack of community collaboration in the implementation process that become the idea of blameworthiness and pretexts.

Cui, Y., Shooshtari, S., Forget, E. L., Clara, I., & Cheung, K. F. (2014). Smoking during Pregnancy: Findings from the 2009–2010 Canadian Community Health Survey. Plos ONE, 9(1), 1-5. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0084640

Kelly, K., Clark, B., Brown, V., & Sitzia, J. (2003). Good practice in the conduct and reporting of survey research. International Journal for Quality in Health Care. Retrieved from http://intqhc.oxfordjournals.org/content/15/3/261

Nault, S., & Stapleton, P. (2011). The community participation process in ecotourism development: a case study of the community of Sogoog, Bayan-Ulgii, Mongolia. Journal of Sustainable Tourism, 19(6), 695-712.

Abubakar Binji

Abubakar Binji is an expert in news publishing, author and editor of various research articles and journals; acquired extensive experiences in the field of healthcare management, leadership, community health, and healthcare data analytics. He, Abubakar Binji has engaged in various scholarly research in United States of America and abroad.