To select a sample, researchers need a ‘sampling frame’. This is a list of everyone in the target population of interest, from which a sample can be drawn. The choice of sampling frame depends on who the study wants to sample and when they would like to first interview them.
For example, the SWS wanted to interview women before they became pregnant, which ruled out certain sampling options (such as recruiting the sample through maternity records).
When assessing the sampling frame used for a study, it is important to consider how accurately the frame reflects the target population of interest. For example, does it include people who are not in the target population at all (and who need to be identified and weeded out)? Or is it missing people who are in the target population?
Child Benefit Records were used as the sampling frame for the Millennium Cohort Study. At the time, Child Benefit was universal, which meant that the list of recipients in 2000-01 (when the study started) was an accurate reflection of all UK families with a child born in the study’s target year.
However, Child Benefit Records are no longer as suitable a sampling frame for birth cohort studies because the benefit is no longer universal. Changes made in 2013 mean that the records under-represent higher earners, who are no longer entitled to Child Benefit. If a study were to use the current Child Benefit Records as a sampling frame today, the sample would under-represent higher income households.
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