Predictors of non-response were investigated in a 15-year follow-up (1981–1996) of 3,481 individuals in a probability sample
from the household population of East Baltimore. Demographics (age, sex, race, education, marital status, and unemployment),
household factors (living arrangements, household income, household size, and number of children), cultural variables (ancestral
ethnicity and foreign language), social variables (social support and networks, committing felony, carrying a weapon, using
an alias, and wandering), health factors (physical illness, health insurance, medical assistance, Medicare, receiving disability
benefits, social security, and welfare), interviewer's observation, and psychopathologic variables (mental disorders, suicide
behavior, comorbidity, and drug use) were collected at baseline in 1981 and in 1982, then linked to follow-up data between
1993 and 1996. A tracing process involving mail, phone, criss-cross directories, motor vehicle administration records, a commercial
credit bureau, the state criminal justice system, hospital records, the US National Death Index, and field tracing were used
to locate the original sample. A total of 3,066 respondents of the original sample (88.1%) were traced. Non-response was categorized
into
Sample Mortality (that part of the original sample that died during follow-up),
Sample Loss (that part of the original sample that survived but could not be found) and
Refusal (that part of the original sample that survived and was found but refused to participate). Stratified analysis and adjusted
multiple logistic regression modeling found sample mortality and sample loss were strongly influenced by individual and household
variables and by psychopathology. Sample mortality was influenced by specific mental disorders or conditions as mania, drug
abuse/dependency, antisocial personality, cognitive impairment, alcohol abuse/dependency, phobia, drug use (except PCP), and
comorbidity. Household factors protective against mortality include higher household income, not living as extended members
in a married couple family, and living with children in the household. Persons who were unemployed, widowed or single, without
high school education, male, and 65 years of age or older were more likely to die. Sample loss was influenced by cognitive
impairment, antisocial personality, and cocaine use. Household factors linked to sample loss include living in female-headed
families, or non-family households, and living alone. Young nonwhite, divorced/separated, without high school education, and
unemployed were also harder to find. Refusal was associated with being white, with incomplete elementary education, living
as a spouse in traditional married couple families, or as a child in female-headed families. Psychopathology did not influence
refusal.