BACKGROUND: There is growing interest in the relationship between time spent in adverse circumstances across life course and increased risk of chronic disease and early mortality. This accumulation hypothesis is usually tested by summing indicators of binary variables across the life span to form an overall score that is then used as the exposure in regression models for health outcomes. This article highlights potential issues in the interpretation of results obtained from such an approach. METHODS: We propose a model-building framework that can be used to formally compare alternative hypotheses on the effect of multiple binary exposure measurements collected across the life course. The saturated model where the order and value of the bina...
Many diseases commonly associated with aging are now thought to have social and physiologic antecede...
There is growing recognition that the risk of many diseases in later life, such as type 2 diabetes o...
This paper establishes a unified framework to fully account for the changing social gradient over th...
Background There is growing interest in the relationship between time spent in adverse circumstances...
Epidemiologists are often interested in examining the effect on a later-life outcome of an exposure ...
Epidemiologists are often interested in examining the effect on a later-life outcome of an exposure ...
© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiologic...
The study of life-course socioeconomic disadvantage and health raises several important conceptual a...
Abstract: epidemiologists are often interested in examining the effect on a later-life outcome of an...
We present three statistical methods for causal analysis in life course research that are able to ta...
Life course epidemiology has used models of accumulation and critical or sensitive periods to examin...
© 2017, © The Author(s) 2017. Objective: This study presents three approaches, that is, cumulative r...
First published online 13 October 2015.We present three statistical methods for causal analysis in l...
Many diseases commonly associated with aging are now thought to have social and physiologic antecede...
Many questions in life course epidemiology involve mediation and/or interaction because of the long ...
Many diseases commonly associated with aging are now thought to have social and physiologic antecede...
There is growing recognition that the risk of many diseases in later life, such as type 2 diabetes o...
This paper establishes a unified framework to fully account for the changing social gradient over th...
Background There is growing interest in the relationship between time spent in adverse circumstances...
Epidemiologists are often interested in examining the effect on a later-life outcome of an exposure ...
Epidemiologists are often interested in examining the effect on a later-life outcome of an exposure ...
© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiologic...
The study of life-course socioeconomic disadvantage and health raises several important conceptual a...
Abstract: epidemiologists are often interested in examining the effect on a later-life outcome of an...
We present three statistical methods for causal analysis in life course research that are able to ta...
Life course epidemiology has used models of accumulation and critical or sensitive periods to examin...
© 2017, © The Author(s) 2017. Objective: This study presents three approaches, that is, cumulative r...
First published online 13 October 2015.We present three statistical methods for causal analysis in l...
Many diseases commonly associated with aging are now thought to have social and physiologic antecede...
Many questions in life course epidemiology involve mediation and/or interaction because of the long ...
Many diseases commonly associated with aging are now thought to have social and physiologic antecede...
There is growing recognition that the risk of many diseases in later life, such as type 2 diabetes o...
This paper establishes a unified framework to fully account for the changing social gradient over th...