Unrepresentative Big Surveys Significantly Overestimate US Vaccine Uptake

Author:

Bradley Valerie C.,Kuriwaki Shiro,Isakov Michael,Sejdinovic Dino,Meng Xiao-Li,Flaxman SethORCID

Abstract

AbstractSurveys are a crucial tool for understanding public opinion and behavior, and their accuracy depends on maintaining statistical representativeness of their target populations by minimizing biases from all sources. Increasing data size shrinks confidence intervals but magnifies the impact of survey bias – an instance of the Big Data Paradox 1. Here we demonstrate this paradox in estimates of first-dose COVID-19 vaccine uptake in US adults: Delphi-Facebook 2,3 (about 250,000 responses per week) and Census Household Pulse 4 (about 75,000 per week). By May 2021, Delphi-Facebook overestimated uptake by 17 percentage points and Census Household Pulse by 14, compared to a benchmark from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). Moreover, their large data sizes led to minuscule margins of error on the incorrect estimates. In contrast, an Axios-Ipsos online panel 5 with about 1,000 responses following survey research best practices 6 provided reliable estimates and uncertainty. We decompose observed error using a recent analytic framework 1 to explain the inaccuracy in the three surveys. We then analyze the implications for vaccine hesitancy and willingness. We show how a survey of 250,000 respondents can produce an estimate of the population mean that is no more accurate than an estimate from a simple random sample of size 10. Our central message is that data quality matters far more than data quantity, and compensating the former with the latter is a mathematically provable losing proposition.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference64 articles.

1. Statistical paradises and paradoxes in big data (I): Law of large populations, big data paradox, and the 2016 US presidential election;THE Annals of Applied Statistics,2018

2. Neta Barkay , Curtiss Cobb , Roee Eilat , Tal Galili , Daniel Haimovich , Sarah Larocca , Katherine Morris , and Tal Sarig . Weights and methodology brief for the COVID-19 Symptom Survey by University of Maryland and Carnegie Mellon University, in partnership with Facebook. https://arxiv.org/abs/2009.14675, 2020.

3. Jason F. Fields , Jeniffer Hunter-Childs , A. Tersine , J. Sisson , E. Parker , V. Velkoff , C. Logan , and H. Shin . Design and operation of the 2020 Household Pulse survey. 2020. U.S. Census Bureau. https://perma.cc/JC3D-3LBY.

4. Chris Jackson , Mallory Newall , and Jinhee Yi . Axios Ipsos Coronavirus Index, 2021. https://www.ipsos.com/en-us/news-polls/axios-ipsos-coronavirus-index.

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