Abstract :
This paper presents a case study of the challenges and requirements associated
with harmonising data from two independently-conceived datasets from The
Netherlands and the United Kingdom: the Longitudinal Aging Study
Amsterdam (LASA) and the Nottingham Longitudinal Study of Activity and
Ageing (NLSAA). The objectives were to create equivalent samples and variables,
and to identify the methodological differences that affect the comparability of the
samples. Data are available from the two studies’ 1992–93 surveys for respondents
born during 1908–20, and the common data set had 1,768 records and enabled
the creation of 26 harmonised variables in the following domains : demographic
composition and personal finances, physical health, mental health and loneliness,
contacts with health services, physical activity, religious attendance and pet
ownership. The ways in which the methodological differences between the two
studies and their different selective attrition might lead to sample differences
were carefully considered. It was concluded that the challenges of conducting
cross-national comparative research using independent datasets include differences
in sampling, study design, measurement instruments, response rates
and selective attrition. To reach conclusions from any comparative study about
substantive socio-cultural differences, these challenges must first be identified and
addressed
Keywords :
older people , Cross-national comparisons , data harmonisation , sample attrition