Skip to main content
SAP Metadata Portal
Data Catalog Agencies About Contact Help
Log in Register
  1. Home
  2. Data Catalog
  3. 2004 National Nursing Assistant Survey - Restricted Dataset

2004 National Nursing Assistant Survey - Restricted Dataset

Add to My Basket

Description

The 2004 National Nursing Home Survey (NNHS), conducted between August and December of 2004, was reintroduced into the field after a five-year break, during which time the survey was redesigned and expanded to collect many new data items. The 2004 NNHS included a supplemental survey of nursing assistants employed by nursing homes, the National Nursing Assistant Survey (NNAS), which was sponsored by the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (APSE). Nursing assistants were considered eligible to participate in the survey if they 1) provided assistance with activities of daily living (ADLs); 2) were paid to provide those services; 3) were certified (or in the process of certification) to provide Medicare/Medicaid reimbursable services; 4) worked at least 16 hours per week; and 5) were employees of the nursing home and not contract employees. A sample of up to eight nursing assistants was selected from about half of the nursing home sample at the time of the facility interview. The NNAS was administered after the nursing home visit, using a computer-assisted telephone interview (CATI) system.

See More

Metadata

  • Identification and Summary
  • Scope and Coverage
  • Detailed Methodology
  • Data Access
  • Application-Related
  • Export Metadata

Scope and Coverage

Smallest Geographic Unit
MSA
Years Available
2004 - 2004
Universe
  • For the 2004 National Nursing Home Survey, 1,500 nursing home facilities were selected from a sampling frame of U.S. nursing homes. The sampling frame was drawn from two sources: (1) the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Provider of Services file of U.S. nursing homes, and (2) State licensing lists compiled by a private organization. These two files contained approximately 17,000 nursing homes. The combined files were matched and unduplicated, resulting in a sampling frame of 16,628 nursing homes. A random subsample (n=790) of these selected facilities was then selected to participate in the NNAS. From the 582 eligible facilities that agreed to participate in the NNAS, 4,542 nursing assistants were sampled. Of these, 4,274 were eligible and 3,017 completed an interview.
Spatial Coverage
  • United States
Unit of Observation
Individual
Classification(s)
  • Health
NSF Logo
Data Catalog Agencies About Help Privacy Act and Public Burden
Looking for U.S. government information and services? Visit USA.gov
An official website managed by the National Science Foundation -   ncses.nsf.gov
About StatsPolicy FOIA Privacy Accessibility No FEAR Act Vulnerability Disclosure