Overlooked Threats to Respondent Driven Sampling Estimators: Peer Recruitment Reality, Degree Measures, and Random Selection Assumption.

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Overlooked Threats to Respondent Driven Sampling Estimators: Peer Recruitment Reality, Degree Measures, and Random Selection Assumption. is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

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P356DOI10.1007/S10461-017-1827-1
P932PMC publication ID5745307
P698PubMed publication ID28660381

P50authorJianghong LiQ88412435
Thomas W ValenteQ89290836
P2093author name stringRobert Heimer
Alexei Zelenev
Eduardo Robles
Greg Palmer
Chinekwu Obidoa
Hee-Sung Shin
Margaret Weeks
Gayatri Moothi
Heather Mosher
P2860cites workUsing social networks to recruit an HIV vaccine preparedness cohortQ30227795
Assessment of Random Recruitment Assumption in Respondent-Driven Sampling in Egocentric Network DataQ30620984
Application of respondent driven sampling to collect baseline data on FSWs and MSM for HIV risk reduction interventions in two urban centres in Papua New GuineaQ31070418
Accuracy of name and age data provided about network members in a social network study of people who use drugs: implications for constructing sociometric networksQ31157129
Evaluating recruitment among female sex workers and injecting drug users at risk for HIV using respondent-driven sampling in EstoniaQ33754339
Assessing respondent-driven samplingQ33859361
Outcomes of a peer HIV prevention program with injection drug and crack users: the Risk Avoidance PartnershipQ33958259
Comparing respondent-driven sampling and targeted sampling methods of recruiting injection drug users in San FranciscoQ34117952
Multiplex congruity: friendship networks and perceived popularity as correlates of adolescent alcohol use.Q34566640
Assessment of respondent driven sampling for recruiting female sex workers in two Vietnamese cities: reaching the unseen sex worker.Q35230016
Respondent-driven sampling of injection drug users in two U.S.-Mexico border cities: recruitment dynamics and impact on estimates of HIV and syphilis prevalenceQ35230093
Variance estimation, design effects, and sample size calculations for respondent-driven samplingQ35230123
Implementation and analysis of respondent driven sampling: lessons learned from the fieldQ35230142
Spatial, temporal and relational patterns in respondent-driven sampling: evidence from a social network study of rural drug usersQ35541751
Assessing the geographic coverage and spatial clustering of illicit drug users recruited through respondent-driven sampling in New York CityQ35543311
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SNOWBALL VERSUS RESPONDENT-DRIVEN SAMPLINGQ35650557
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Network Model-Assisted Inference from Respondent-Driven Sampling DataQ35861848
Network Structure and Biased Variance Estimation in Respondent Driven SamplingQ35872274
A qualitative analysis of peer recruitment pressures in respondent driven sampling: Are risks above the ethical limit?Q35977926
Partner Naming and Forgetting: Recall of Network MembersQ36076255
Review of sampling hard-to-reach and hidden populations for HIV surveillanceQ36147918
Respondent-Driven Sampling: An Assessment of Current MethodologyQ36219811
The relevance of drug injectors' social and risk networks for understanding and preventing HIV infectionQ36746154
Effectiveness of respondent-driven sampling for recruiting drug users in New York City: findings from a pilot studyQ36856070
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A social network approach to demonstrate the diffusion and change process of intervention from peer health advocates to the drug using community.Q37088956
Using respondent-driven sampling methodology for HIV biological and behavioral surveillance in international settings: a systematic reviewQ37193820
Network Sampling with Memory: A proposal for more efficient sampling from social networksQ37247152
Simultaneous recruitment of drug users and men who have sex with men in the United States and Russia using respondent-driven sampling: sampling methods and implicationsQ37249708
Implementation challenges to using respondent-driven sampling methodology for HIV biological and behavioral surveillance: field experiences in international settingsQ39109661
Network-related mechanisms may help explain long-term HIV-1 seroprevalence levels that remain high but do not approach population-group saturationQ39552765
HIV-associated behaviors among injecting-drug users--23 Cities, United States, May 2005-February 2006.Q39880574
Identification of homophily and preferential recruitment in respondent-driven samplingQ40163359
Network models for HIV outreach and prevention programs for drug usersQ41065426
The Strength of Weak TiesQ41779230
Determinants of injection drug user (IDU) syringe sharing: the relationship between availability of syringes and risk network member characteristics in Winnipeg, CanadaQ42631493
Social factors related to syringe sharing among injecting partners: a focus on genderQ42667888
Nonparametric Identification for Respondent-Driven Sampling.Q42928325
Formative research to optimize respondent-driven sampling surveys among hard-to-reach populations in HIV behavioral and biological surveillance: lessons learned from four case studies.Q51565708
The relationships between sexual behavior, alcohol use, and personal network characteristics among injecting drug users in Baltimore, Maryland.Q51634821
Forgetting as a cause of incomplete reporting of sexual and drug injection partners.Q51986066
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The effect of peer-driven intervention on rates of screening for AIDS clinical trials among African Americans and Hispanics.Q55446924
5. Sampling and Estimation in Hidden Populations Using Respondent-Driven SamplingQ56505049
Respondent-Driven Sampling II: Deriving Valid Population Estimates from Chain-Referral Samples of Hidden PopulationsQ56505051
Respondent-Driven Sampling: A New Approach to the Study of Hidden PopulationsQ56505053
Ethical considerations in HIV/AIDS biobehavioral surveys that use respondent-driven sampling: illustrations from LebanonQ56781466
Personal social networks and HIV status among women on methadoneQ58136276
Social Networks of Drug Users in High-Risk Sites: Finding the ConnectionsQ58488905
Selective risk taking among needle exchange participants: implications for supplemental interventionsQ73582046
Mechanisms through which drug, sex partner, and friendship network characteristics relate to risky needle use among high risk youth and young adultsQ80019942
Critical issues and further questions about respondent-driven sampling: comment on Ramirez-Valles, et al. (2005)Q81607526
P433issue7
P921main subjectoversightQ60697989
P304page(s)2340-2359
P577publication date2018-07-01
P1433published inAIDS and BehaviorQ15752229
P1476titleOverlooked Threats to Respondent Driven Sampling Estimators: Peer Recruitment Reality, Degree Measures, and Random Selection Assumption
P478volume22

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cites work (P2860)
Q91892891Estimation and correction of bias in network simulations based on respondent-driven sampling data
Q38679499HIV Risk, Prevalence, and Access to Care Among Men Who Have Sex with Men in Lebanon.
Q45324640Hepatitis C virus treatment as prevention in an extended network of people who inject drugs in the USA: a modelling study
Q57809085Intervention Reach and Sexual Risk Reduction of a Multi-level, Community-Based HIV Prevention Intervention for Crack Users in San Salvador, El Salvador
Q52656443Multiple strategies to identify HIV-positive black men who have sex with men and transgender women in New York City: a cross-sectional analysis of recruitment results.
Q99709701Risky injection practices and HCV awareness in Chiang Mai Province, Thailand: a respondent-driven sampling study of people who inject drugs
Q89130648Statistical adjustment of network degree in respondent-driven sampling estimators: venue attendance as a proxy for network size among young MSM

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