NIDA Research Monograph, Number 167 [Printed in 1997]
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Table of Contents
Introduction-The Validity of Self-Reported
Drug Use: Improving the Accuracy of Survey Estimates -----1 Lana Harrison and Arthur Hughes
The Validity of Self-Reported Drug Use
in Survey Research: An Overview and Critique of Research Methods-----17 Lana Harrison
The Validity of Self-Reported Drug Use
Data: The Accuracy of Responses on Confidential Self-Administered Answer
Sheets-----37 Adele V. Harrell
The Recanting of Earlier Reported Drug
Use by Young Adults-----59 Lloyd D. Johnston and Patrick
M. O'Malley
The Reliability and Consistency of Drug
Reporting in Ethnographic Samples-----81 Michael Fendrich,
Mary Ellen Mackesy-Amiti, Joseph S. Wislar, and Paul Goldstein
New Developments in Biological Measures of
Drug Prevalence-----108 Edward J. Cone
Comparison of Self-Reported Drug Use With
Quantitative and Qualitative Urinalysis for Assessment of Drug Use in Treatment
Studies-----130 Kenzie L. Preston, Kenneth Silverman,
Charles R. Schuster, and Edward J. Cone
The Forensic Application of Testing Hair
for Drugs of Abuse-----146 Mark L. Miller, Brian Donnelly,
and Roger M. Martz
Patterns of Concordance Between Hair
Assays and Urinalysis for Cocaine: Longitudinal Analysis of Probationers
in Pinellas County, Florida-----161 Tom Mieczkowski
and Richard Newel
The Validity of Self-Reports of Drug Use at
Treatment Admission and at Followup: Comparisons With Urinalysis and Hair
Assays-----200 Eric D. Wish, Jeffrey A. Hoffman, and
Susanna Nemes
The Validity of Self-Reported Cocaine Use
in Two High-Risk Populations-----227 Stephen Magura
and Sung-Yeon Kang
Assessing Drug Use in the Workplace: A Comparison
of Self-Report, Urinalysis, and Hair Analysis-----247 Royer
F. Cook, Alan D. Bernstein, and Christine M. Andrews
Studies of Nonresponse and Measurement
Error in the National Household Survey on Drug Abuse-----273 Joseph Gfroerer, Judith Lessler, and Teresa Parsley
Adaptive Sampling in Behavioral Surveys-----296 Stephen K. Thompson
Self-Reported Drug Use: Results of Selected
Empirical Investigations of Validity-----320 Yih-Ing
Hser
Design and Results of the Women's Health
Study-----344 Roger Tourangeau, Jared B. Jobe, William
F. Pratt, and Kenneth Rasinski
Mode of Interview and Reporting of Sensitive
Issues: Design and Implementation of Audio Computer-Assisted Self-Interviewing-----366 Judith T. Lessler and James M. O'Reilly
Privacy Effects on Self-Reported Drug
Use: Interactions With Survey Mode and Respondent Characteristics-----383 William S. Aquilino
The Use of the Psychological Laboratory
To Study Sensitive Survey Topics -----416 Gordon B.
Willis
Repeated Measures Estimation of Measurement
Bias for Self-Reported Drug Use With Applications to the National Household
Survey on Drug Abuse-----439 Paul P. Biemer and Michael
Witt
The Use of External Data Sources and Ratio
Estimation To Improve Estimates of Hardcore Drug Use from the NHSDA-----477 Douglas Wright, Joseph Gfroerer, and Joan Epstein
Ordering Information-----498
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