Data Dictionary: ACS 2020 (5-Year Estimates)
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Data Source:U.S. Census Bureau
Table: B26201. Group Quarters Type (5 Types) By Sex By Age [253]
Universe: Universe: Total Population
Table Details
B26201. Group Quarters Type (5 Types) By Sex By Age
Universe: Universe: Total Population
VariableLabel
B26201001
B26201002
B26201003
B26201004
B26201005
B26201006
B26201007
B26201008
B26201009
B26201010
B26201011
B26201012
B26201013
B26201014
B26201015
B26201016
B26201017
B26201018
B26201019
B26201020
B26201021
B26201022
B26201023
B26201024
B26201025
B26201026
B26201027
B26201028
B26201029
B26201030
B26201031
B26201032
B26201033
B26201034
B26201035
B26201036
B26201037
B26201038
B26201039
B26201040
B26201041
B26201042
B26201043
B26201044
B26201045
B26201046
B26201047
B26201048
B26201049
B26201050
B26201051
B26201052
B26201053
B26201054
B26201055
B26201056
B26201057
B26201058
B26201059
B26201060
B26201061
B26201062
B26201063
B26201064
B26201065
B26201066
B26201067
B26201068
B26201069
B26201070
B26201071
B26201072
B26201073
B26201074
B26201075
B26201076
B26201077
B26201078
B26201079
B26201080
B26201081
B26201082
B26201083
B26201084
B26201085
B26201086
B26201087
B26201088
B26201089
B26201090
B26201091
B26201092
B26201093
B26201094
B26201095
B26201096
B26201097
B26201098
B26201099
B26201100
B26201101
B26201102
B26201103
B26201104
B26201105
B26201106
B26201107
B26201108
B26201109
B26201110
B26201111
B26201112
B26201113
B26201114
B26201115
B26201116
B26201117
B26201118
B26201119
B26201120
B26201121
B26201122
B26201123
B26201124
B26201125
B26201126
B26201127
B26201128
B26201129
B26201130
B26201131
B26201132
B26201133
B26201134
B26201135
B26201136
B26201137
B26201138
B26201139
B26201140
B26201141
B26201142
B26201143
B26201144
B26201145
B26201146
B26201147
B26201148
B26201149
B26201150
B26201151
B26201152
B26201153
B26201154
B26201155
B26201156
B26201157
B26201158
B26201159
B26201160
B26201161
B26201162
B26201163
B26201164
B26201165
B26201166
B26201167
B26201168
B26201169
B26201170
B26201171
B26201172
B26201173
B26201174
B26201175
B26201176
B26201177
B26201178
B26201179
B26201180
B26201181
B26201182
B26201183
B26201184
B26201185
B26201186
B26201187
B26201188
B26201189
B26201190
B26201191
B26201192
B26201193
B26201194
B26201195
B26201196
B26201197
B26201198
B26201199
B26201200
B26201201
B26201202
B26201203
B26201204
B26201205
B26201206
B26201207
B26201208
B26201209
B26201210
B26201211
B26201212
B26201213
B26201214
B26201215
B26201216
B26201217
B26201218
B26201219
B26201220
B26201221
B26201222
B26201223
B26201224
B26201225
B26201226
B26201227
B26201228
B26201229
B26201230
B26201231
B26201232
B26201233
B26201234
B26201235
B26201236
B26201237
B26201238
B26201239
B26201240
B26201241
B26201242
B26201243
B26201244
B26201245
B26201246
B26201247
B26201248
B26201249
B26201250
B26201251
B26201252
B26201253
Relevant Documentation:
Excerpt from: Social Explorer; U.S. Census Bureau; 2020 ACS 1-year and 2016-2020 ACS 5-year Data Releases : Technical Documentation.
 
Sex
The data on sex were derived from answers to Question 3 in the 2020 American Community Survey. Individuals were asked to mark either "male" or "female" to indicate their biological sex. For most cases in which sex was invalid, the appropriate entry was determined from other information provided for that person, such as the person's given (i.e., first) name and household relationship. Otherwise, sex was allocated from a hot deck.

Sex is asked for all persons in a household or group quarters. On the mailout/mailback paper questionnaire for households, sex is asked for all persons listed on the form. This form accommodates asking sex for up to 12 people listed as living or residing in the household for at least 2 months. If a respondent indicates that more people are listed as part of the total persons living in the household than the form can accommodate, or if any person included on the form is missing sex, then the household is eligible for Failed Edit Follow-up (FEFU). During FEFU operations, telephone center staffers call respondents to obtain missing data. This includes asking sex for any person in the household missing sex information. In Computer Assisted Telephone Interviews (CATI) and Computer Assisted Personal Interview (CAPI) instruments sex is asked for all persons. In 2006, the ACS began collecting data in group quarters (GQs). This included asking sex for persons living in a group quarters. For additional data collection methodology, please see https://www.census.gov/programs-surveys/acs/.

Data on sex are used to determine the applicability of other questions for a particular individual and to classify other characteristics in tabulations. The sex data collected on the forms are aggregated and provide the number of males and females in the population. These data are needed to interpret most social and economic characteristics used to plan and analyze programs and policies. Data about sex are critical because so many federal programs must differentiate between males and females. The U.S. Departments of Education and Health and Human Services are required by statute to use these data to fund, implement, and evaluate various social and welfare programs, such as the Special Supplemental Food Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) or the Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP). Laws to promote equal employment opportunity for women also require census data on sex. The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs must use census data to develop its state projections of veterans' facilities and benefits. For more information on the use of sex data in Federal programs, please see "ACS Handbook of Questions and Current Federal Uses."

Sex Ratio
The sex ratio represents the balance between the male and female populations. Ratios above 100 indicate a larger male population, and ratios below 100 indicate a larger female population. This measure is derived by dividing the total number of males by the total number of females and then multiplying by 100. It is rounded to the nearest tenth.

Question/Concept History

Sex has been asked of all persons living in a household since the 1996 ACS Test phase. When group quarters were included in the survey universe in 2006, sex was asked of all person in group quarters as well.

Beginning in 2008, the layout of the sex question response categories was changed to a horizontal side-by-side layout from a vertically stacked layout on the mail paper ACS questionnaire.

Limitation of the data

Beginning in 2006, the population in group quarters (GQ) was included in the ACS. Some types of GQ populations have sex distributions that are very different from the household population. The inclusion of the GQ population could therefore have a noticeable impact on the sex distribution. This is particularly true for a given geographic area. This is particularly true for areas with a substantial GQ population.

The Census Bureau tested the changes introduced to the 2008 version of the sex question in the 2007 ACS Grid-Sequential Test (http://www.census.gov/acs). The results of this testing show that the changes may introduce an inconsistency in the data produced for this question as observed from the years 2007 to 2008.

Comparability

Sex is generally comparable across different data sources and data years. However, data users should still be aware of methodological differences that may exist between different data sources if they are comparing American Community Survey sex data to other data sources, such as Population Estimates or Decennial Census data. For example, the American Community Survey data are that of a respondent-based survey and subject to various quality measures, such as sampling and nonsampling error, response rates and item allocation. This differs in design and methodology from other data sources, such as Population Estimates, which is not a survey and involves computational methodology to derive intercensal estimates of the population. While ACS estimates are controlled to Population Estimates for sex at the nation, state and county levels of geography as part of the ACS weighting procedure, variation may exist in the sex structure of a population at lower levels of geography when comparing different time periods or comparing across time due to the absence of controls below the county geography level. For more information on American Community Survey data accuracy and weighting procedures, please see the ACS website (http://www.census.gov).

It should also be noted that although the American Community Survey (ACS) produces population, demographic and housing unit estimates, it is the Census Bureau's Population Estimates Program that produces and disseminates the official estimates of the population for the nation, states, counties, cities and towns and estimates of housing units for states and counties. See http://factfinder.census.gov for data.

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