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  • Title: Overview of important design issues for a National Human Exposure Assessment Survey.
    Author: Callahan MA, Clickner RP, Whitmore RW, Kalton G, Sexton K.
    Journal: J Expo Anal Environ Epidemiol; 1995; 5(3):257-82. PubMed ID: 8814772.
    Abstract:
    Exposure issues have important consequences for regulatory decisions. Reliable answers to exposure questions are critical for site cleanup, model validation, and cumulative risk issues, as well as giving perspective on our risk estimates. This paper discusses some of the important issues in designing the National Human Exposure Assessment Survey (NHEXAS) and, by implication, other exposure-monitoring-based studies as well. Sampling design issues are discussed in terms useful to exposure assessors. These issues include simple random sample designs versus more complex multistage designs, design efficiency, how to determine the sample size for the desired precision of the estimate, and the effects of stratification and oversampling on the needed sample size. This paper also discusses several important nonsampling issues such as population definition, response rates, and several potential sources of error in interpreting the monitoring results.
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