Global Health Data Exchange - Discover the World's Health Data

United States National Health Interview Survey 2001

Nav

General Info
Geography 
Coverage type 
Country
Time period covered 
01/2001 - 12/2001
Data type
Survey:
  • Cross-sectional
  • Household
  • Individual
  • Interview
  • Nationally representative
Summary 

The National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) is a primary source of information on the health of the population of the United States. The NHIS is a cross-sectional household interview survey that is fielded continuously throughout the year. The interviewed sample for the 2001 NHIS consisted of 38,932 households, yielding 100,761 persons in 39,633 families.

The 2001 NHIS covered a wide variety of topics, such as family composition, socio-demographic characteristics, injuries, health care access and utilization, health insurance, income and assets, conditions, health behaviors, physical activity, and immunizations. The supplemental sections of the survey included: health literacy regarding stroke, CPR, and heart disease; emergency access to care; social support of disabled persons; children's mental health.

Keywords 
Alcohol use, Animal injuries, Anxiety, Assets, Asthma, Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, Autism, Back and neck pain, Birth place, Birth weight, Body mass index, COPD, Cancers, Cardiovascular and circulatory diseases, Child health care, Congenital anomalies, Congenital heart anomalies, DTP vaccines, Dental care, Diabetes, Diarrhea, Digestive diseases, Disability, Down's syndrome, Edentulism, Education, Employment, Ethnicity, Falls, Family composition, Gout, Health care access, Health care use, Health education, Health insurance, Health literacy, Health status, Hearing aids, Hearing loss, Heart disease, Height, Hemorrhagic stroke, Hepatitis, Hepatitis B vaccines, Hib vaccines, Home care, Hospitals, Housing conditions, Hypertension, Idiopathic intellectual disability, Immunization, Income, Influenza vaccines, Inguinal and femoral hernia, Injuries, International migration, Interventions, Intestinal infectious diseases, Limited mobility, Marital status, Measles vaccines, Medical equipment, Medical tests, Mental and behavioral disorders, Migraine, Military service, Multiple sclerosis, Mumps vaccines, Musculoskeletal diseases, Noncommunicable diseases, Osteoporosis, Parkinson's disease, Peptic ulcer disease, Physical activity, Pneumococcal vaccines, Poisonings, Polio, Polio vaccines, Pregnancy, Public social assistance, Race, Road traffic injuries, Rubella vaccines, Safety, Seat belts, Seizures, Sickle cell disorders, Stroke, Surgical procedures, Therapies, Tobacco smoking, Upper respiratory infections, Varicella, Vision loss, Weight