A major aim of epidemiology is to explore the prognosis and ætiology of diseases, in order to improve treatment and prevention. To avoid misleading interpretations of observed associations between a modi-fier and the occurrence of a disease, the all-purpose idiom “risk factor” should be replaced by 3 locutions with narrower meanings: a risk marker is a modifier which is associated (correlated) with disease prevalence (case-control studies) or incidence (cohort studies); a risk marker truly becomes a risk factor if its experimental correction (inter-vention studies) does improve the disease incidence or prognosis; a risk factor is promoted to the rank of cause if it is proved to be necessary (sine qua non) for the occurrence of the disease. ...
<p>Definitions of risk factors.<a href="http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal...
To the clinical specialists, epidemiology appears to be a hyphenated word associated with their clin...
Epidemiological model including exposures, potential confounders and outcome variables.</p
Risk factors for road safety; Inventory and selection for research purposes. This report contains an...
Abstract Background In biomedical research much effort is thought to be wasted. Recommendations for ...
Ian McDowell discusses many of the limitations of the risk factor paradigm in public health and epid...
In biomedical research, we are often interested in quantifying the relationship between an exposure ...
An individual's overall cardiovascular risk should guide appropriate therapy and patient management....
Introduction. Despite the latest advances in modern medicine, the direct etiological factors of many...
Epidemiologists aim to identify modifiable causes of disease, this often being a prerequisite for th...
<p>A and B are the risk factors. O is the outcome. The single/double-headed arrow between A and B in...
Despite their observational nature, epidemiologic studies have been used to make inductive inference...
The term ”risk factor” is used synonymously with both predictor and causal factor, and causal aims o...
<p>(1) One risk factor is defined as a detected mutation per gene expression</p><p>Evaluation of the...
International audienceThe scientific and public health claim that smoking is a cause of lung cancer ...
<p>Definitions of risk factors.<a href="http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal...
To the clinical specialists, epidemiology appears to be a hyphenated word associated with their clin...
Epidemiological model including exposures, potential confounders and outcome variables.</p
Risk factors for road safety; Inventory and selection for research purposes. This report contains an...
Abstract Background In biomedical research much effort is thought to be wasted. Recommendations for ...
Ian McDowell discusses many of the limitations of the risk factor paradigm in public health and epid...
In biomedical research, we are often interested in quantifying the relationship between an exposure ...
An individual's overall cardiovascular risk should guide appropriate therapy and patient management....
Introduction. Despite the latest advances in modern medicine, the direct etiological factors of many...
Epidemiologists aim to identify modifiable causes of disease, this often being a prerequisite for th...
<p>A and B are the risk factors. O is the outcome. The single/double-headed arrow between A and B in...
Despite their observational nature, epidemiologic studies have been used to make inductive inference...
The term ”risk factor” is used synonymously with both predictor and causal factor, and causal aims o...
<p>(1) One risk factor is defined as a detected mutation per gene expression</p><p>Evaluation of the...
International audienceThe scientific and public health claim that smoking is a cause of lung cancer ...
<p>Definitions of risk factors.<a href="http://www.plosmedicine.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal...
To the clinical specialists, epidemiology appears to be a hyphenated word associated with their clin...
Epidemiological model including exposures, potential confounders and outcome variables.</p