Sufficient causes of disease are redundant when an individual acquires the components of two or more sufficient causes. In this circumstance, the individual still would have become diseased even if one of the sufficient causes had not been acquired. In the context of a study, when any individuals acquire components of more than one sufficient cause over the observation period, the etiologic effect of the exposure (defined as the absolute or relative difference between the proportion of the exposed who develop the disease by the end of the study period and the proportion of those individuals who would have developed the disease at the moment they did even in the absence of the exposure) may be underestimated. Even in the absence of confoundi...
The paper examines definitions of ‘cause’ in the epidemiological literature. Those definitions all d...
Abstract : Epidemiology, the science of the determinants of illness in populations, lacks a comprehe...
This paper explores a number of interrelated issues that affect assessment of the global burden of d...
The sufficient-component cause model is one of the most discussed recent theories in disease causati...
Up to date, the sufficient-component cause model seems to be a theoretical framework for disease cau...
Abstract A person can experience an effect on the occurrence of an outcome in a defined follow-up pe...
The assessment of causality is fundamental to epidemiology and biomedical sciences. One well-known a...
Simulation studies are a powerful and important tool in epidemiologic teaching, especially for under...
Sufficient-component causes are discussed within the potential outcome framework so as to formalize ...
Disease can be caused by different mechanisms. A possible causal model proposed by Rothman is a comp...
This chapter explores the idea that causal inference is warranted if and only if the mechanism under...
Causal inference requires an understanding of the conditions under which association equals causatio...
Rothman's minimal sufficient cause model can be systematically developed as a method for discussing ...
For decades, the sufficient cause model and the counterfactual model have shaped our understanding o...
Bradford Hill (1965) highlighted nine aspects of the complex evidential situation a medical research...
The paper examines definitions of ‘cause’ in the epidemiological literature. Those definitions all d...
Abstract : Epidemiology, the science of the determinants of illness in populations, lacks a comprehe...
This paper explores a number of interrelated issues that affect assessment of the global burden of d...
The sufficient-component cause model is one of the most discussed recent theories in disease causati...
Up to date, the sufficient-component cause model seems to be a theoretical framework for disease cau...
Abstract A person can experience an effect on the occurrence of an outcome in a defined follow-up pe...
The assessment of causality is fundamental to epidemiology and biomedical sciences. One well-known a...
Simulation studies are a powerful and important tool in epidemiologic teaching, especially for under...
Sufficient-component causes are discussed within the potential outcome framework so as to formalize ...
Disease can be caused by different mechanisms. A possible causal model proposed by Rothman is a comp...
This chapter explores the idea that causal inference is warranted if and only if the mechanism under...
Causal inference requires an understanding of the conditions under which association equals causatio...
Rothman's minimal sufficient cause model can be systematically developed as a method for discussing ...
For decades, the sufficient cause model and the counterfactual model have shaped our understanding o...
Bradford Hill (1965) highlighted nine aspects of the complex evidential situation a medical research...
The paper examines definitions of ‘cause’ in the epidemiological literature. Those definitions all d...
Abstract : Epidemiology, the science of the determinants of illness in populations, lacks a comprehe...
This paper explores a number of interrelated issues that affect assessment of the global burden of d...