Case Control Studies
Interviewer Bias
If the interviewer knows who the cases are, this may influence the way the information is interpreted
Are case control studies suitable for looking at rare diseases?
Yes
Disadvantages of case control studies (5)
1) Can't calculate prevalence as the sample isn't random 2) Can't assess incidence as the data is from one point in time 3) Bias can be a problem 4) Can't assess causation as the data is collected after the outcome occurred 5) Can only study association between exposure(s) and one outcome
How to define a control group (3)
1) Controls must not have the disease under study, or a diseased related to the exposures under study 2) Same eligibility criteria as case group 3) Controls need to be as similar to case group as possible, i.e. from same hospital/community
What is a case control study? (3)
1) Patients are selected based on the presence or absence of disease 2) An exposure of interest is then measured in both groups and compared 3) The effect of exposure on the risk of disease is calculated using OR
How to define a case group (3)
1) Precise case definition criteria 2) Eligibility criteria 3) Source of cases
Advantages of case control studies (3)
1) Reduces number of people needing to be studied 2) No follow up over time = relatively cheap and easy 3) Allows multiple exposures to be studied
Selection Bias
Cases and controls are not representative of people with/without the disease
Response Bias
Exposure information is reported differently between case and control groups (demand characteristics)
Systematic Sampling
Sampling sequentially based on the nth person
Random Sampling
Sampling where people are identified from a list of all potential participants
Matched Sampling
Sampling where the control is paired with the case (i.e. age, sex, hospital)
Recall Bias
Selective memory of issues related to exposure/outcome (i.e. those who are ill may remember the exposure better)