chapter 3 statistical association
The role of bias
- The deviation of the results from the truth and can explain an observed association between exposure and outcome variables - Minimized by properly designing and conducting the research study
causal association
A statistical association between the occurrence of a factor and a disease, in which available evidence indicates that the statistically associated factor increases the probability of contracting the disease.
recall bias
Knowledge of presence of disorder alters recall by subjects
confounding variable
a factor other than the independent variable that might produce an effect in an experiment
statistical association
a relationship or correlation between two or more variables that is unlikely to be due to chance
temporal sequence
an appropriate causal order of events. such as starting an exercise program after developing heart disease.
causal relationship
because causation is based on belief or judgement it's important to hypothesize this instead of waiting for further evidence.
Biological credibility
caus and effect relationship that considers a biologic mechanism such as alcohol increasing good cholestrol reducing CHF risk.
evidence
causation must always remain a mtter of belief or judgment based on what?
strength of association
cause and effect relationship that is clear and risk estimate is high and confounding variable is less likely.
Consistency with other investigations
cause in effect relationship conducted by different investigators at different places show similar results.
upset or modified
due to length of studies and structure of technology studies may be this
interviewer bias
effects of interviewers on respondents that lead to biased answers
The role of confounding
existance of a third factor
role of chance
how likely is it that what we found is a true finding
p=<.05
p value must be at or below this level in order to reliable.
validity
role of chance, role of bias, role of confounding are part of statistical evaluation to judge what?
cause and effect
strong association, biological credibility, consistency with other studies, time sequence compatible, evidence of dose-response relationship are part of statistical evaluation to be judged as what?
dose-response relationship
the effect on an organism at different levels of exposure to a pollutant or other hazardous substance. The more exposure the more outcome.
Validity
the extent to which a test measures or predicts what it is supposed to
Generalizability
the extent to which we can claim our findings inform us about a group larger than the one we studied
larger sample
using the role of chance, what reduces variability and increase reliability?
statistics
what cannot establish a causal association?
after chance, bias, and confounding fail to explain findings.
when is cause and effect relationship judgement used?