Doing it all in one day seems a little quick to me. It seems likely that the case-finding procedure had been used locally before (a lot of CSAS surveys were done in Ethiopia during CTC development and roll-out) and the validation was just a quick check. It is possible to do things this quickly if you are very experienced. In this case you would make a qualitative judgement about how well you case-finding procedure works. The "qualities" of a sensitive case-finding procedure are: (1) The key-informant(s) clearly understand what you want. (2) After introductions &c. you are taken immediately to a case of MAM or SAM. (3) When you ask about the child the carer uses the same terms that you use in your case-finding question. (4) When you ask the neighbours about the child they use the same terms that you use in your case-finding question. (5) The carer and the neighbours of a case identify other cases. (6) You find quite a few cases in the first 30 minutes. (7) You visit all parts of the community (if not there is a good reason why not ... the mansions are there) You get to "feel" it when you have a working case-finding method. I do not reccomend this for the first time round and I would, time permitting, do a capture-recapture validation. I think we need to extend your question a bit. The capture-recapture study is usually the end-point of a process. I would take two or three days working out my case-finding procedure. This will be working out what to say, what to ask, who to ask, who to recruit as key-informants, &c. often your first stab will not work well (applying the qualitative test above). Only when you have something that you believe will work do you attempt a capture-recapture study. On one occasion I have had to start again after the capture-recapture study and so a social network analysis. This was in an IDP population and I was hoping I could get away with something simple. Now to your question ... I will break it up ... First ... I have to say "Weight-for-height in a CMAM program? How quaint!". I subscribe to the VALID doctrine (or is it that VALID subscribe to my doctrine?) that a CMAM program using W/H is a contradition in terms since W/H is a coverage killer. This is, however, a different issue. Fifty children in one day is very few children. If you really must do W/H then a two stage screen is good enough for our purposes here. Take MUAC and if MUAC is below (say) 125 mm then measure W/H. You can decide the MUAC threshold using survey data. There is a tool to help with this at: http://www.brixtonhealth.com/Screen100Setup.exe Also see SC-UK's Emergency Nutrition Assessment manual. Using MUAC with a reasonable threshold will increase throughput by a factor of eight or ten (i.e. 400 - 500 kids per day). Remember that you do not need to find every case so you can set the MUAC threshold quite low. Let us not forget that we already have one list. That is the list of active cases already in the program coming from the study communities (this can be an empty set fro some communities). You only need to use your method to find cases and see if you find cases and compare the two lists. There is no need for a list to be complete (in ecology we never think that we have caught every fish in the sea ... we do capture-recapture simply because a complete list cannot be made). Sample size ... We have : N = ((M + 1) * (C + 1)) / (R + 1) where: M + C > N (i.e. the lists must have some overlap) and: R > 7 As with all sample size calulcations we need to make some guesses about what we are trying to find out. In this case we need to guess at two case-finding sensitivities. Let us assume that these are 50% and 80% respectively. We also need to factor in the study population. Let us assume: Number of communities in study = 8 Average community population = 300 Total population = 300 * 8 = 2400 Under 5 years population = 2400 * 0.2 = 480 Number of SAM cases assuming 1% prevalence = 480 * 0.01 = 4.8 (round up to 5). With this study design we can expect: M = 5 * 0.5 = 2.5 (round up to 3) C = 5 * 0.8 = 4 M + C = 3 + 4 = 7 (greater than 5 so OK) R = (3 * 4) / 5 = 2.4 (round down to 2, NOT greater than 7 so NOT OK) In this case we need to increase the number of sampled communities so that we meet the constraint: R > 7 We should have known this from the start since there are only 5 cases and this means R cannot be greater than 5 (so it cannot be greater than 7). It is probably easiest to do the calculations in a spreadsheet (set up the calculations and alter N until the constraints are met). In this example we need 19 cases in the population. For there to be 19 cases at 1% orevalence we need there to be 19 * 100 = 1900 children in the study population. To get this number of children we will need to sample (1900 * 5) / 300 = 32 communities. This might be a very expensive study! You'd probbaly want to go with a smaller sample size and recognise that the study will probably underestimate sensitivity. I would spend no more than two or three days on the capture-recapture study. In fact, I would probably do a SQUEAC coverage assesment. You have to remember that the CSAS survey method and the capture-recapture method were designed primarily as research tools while CTC was being developed and spending a lot of time on the capture-recapature study was not a big issue. I think you will be safe with a small "quick and dirty" study provided you have put the effort into getting the case-finding procedure right.
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