Estimating the Prevalence of Male Clients of Prostitute Women in Vancouver With a Simple Capture–Recapture Method
- 6 April 2006
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of the Royal Statistical Society Series A: Statistics in Society
- Vol. 169 (4) , 745-756
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-985x.2006.00416.x
Abstract
Summary: Capture–recapture techniques are widely used to estimate the size of difficult-to-count human populations. Applications often focus on the overlap between two or more samples, but another type of data that is encountered in human studies involves only the number of times that particular individuals were encountered in the study period. We present a method for estimating the population size in this situation. This method is simple and technically accessible and allows for entries and exits by individuals and for a difference between probabilities of initial and subsequent contacts. We apply the method to arrest data on male clients of prostitute women in Vancouver.Keywords
This publication has 35 references indexed in Scilit:
- LABELING, LIFE CHANCES, AND ADULT CRIME: THE DIRECT AND INDIRECT EFFECTS OF OFFICIAL INTERVENTION IN ADOLESCENCE ON CRIME IN EARLY ADULTHOOD*Criminology, 2003
- Arrests and convictions for cannabis related offences in a New Zealand birth cohortDrug and Alcohol Dependence, 2002
- Theory & Methods: Continuous‐time capture‐recapture models with time variation and behavioural responseAustralian & New Zealand Journal of Statistics, 2002
- Epidemiology of Substance use the Heroin/Cocaine Epidemic in Switzerland 1979-1997: A Mathematical Analysis of Law Enforcement DataSubstance Use & Misuse, 1999
- Estimating Temporary Emigration Using Capture-Recapture Data with Pollock's Robust DesignEcology, 1997
- Capture-recapture estimation with samples of size one using frequency dataBiometrika, 1992
- Capture-Recapture Estimation with Samples of Size One Using Frequency DataBiometrika, 1992
- Sexual behavior of clients with street prostitutes in Camden, NJThe Journal of Sex Research, 1991
- Automobile theft: Estimating the size of the criminal populationJournal of Quantitative Criminology, 1990
- Estimating Population Size for Sparse Data in Capture-Recapture ExperimentsBiometrics, 1989