Life course epidemiology has used models of accumulation and critical or sensitive periods to examine the importance of exposure timing in disease aetiology. These models are usually used to describe the direct effects of exposures over the life course. In comparison with consideration of direct effects only, we show how consideration of total effects improves interpretation of these models, giving clearer notions of when it will be most effective to intervene. We show how life course variation in the total effects depends on the magnitude of the direct effects and the stability of the exposure. We discuss interpretation in terms of total, direct and indirect effects and highlight the causal assumptions required for conclusions as to the mo...
In this article, we combine the extensive literature on the analysis of life-course trajectories as ...
Background: Although life course epidemiology is increasingly employed to conceptualize the determin...
© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiologic...
Life course epidemiology examines biological, behavioral, and social pathways that link exposures du...
Background There is growing interest in the relationship between time spent in adverse circumstances...
A life course approach to chronic disease epidemiology uses a multidisciplinary framework to underst...
BACKGROUND: There is growing interest in the relationship between time spent in adverse circumstance...
The present paper reviews the development of life course epidemiology since its origins during the 1...
The study of life-course socioeconomic disadvantage and health raises several important conceptual a...
We describe the principles of counterfactual thinking in providing more precise definitions of causa...
Epidemiologists are often interested in examining the effect on a later-life outcome of an exposure ...
none3siAccording to the biopsychosocial model, psychosocial and biological factors interact in a num...
There is growing recognition that the risk of many diseases in later life, such as type 2 diabetes o...
Epidemiologists are often interested in examining the effect on a later-life outcome of an exposure ...
In this article, we combine the extensive literature on the analysis of life-course trajectories as ...
In this article, we combine the extensive literature on the analysis of life-course trajectories as ...
Background: Although life course epidemiology is increasingly employed to conceptualize the determin...
© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiologic...
Life course epidemiology examines biological, behavioral, and social pathways that link exposures du...
Background There is growing interest in the relationship between time spent in adverse circumstances...
A life course approach to chronic disease epidemiology uses a multidisciplinary framework to underst...
BACKGROUND: There is growing interest in the relationship between time spent in adverse circumstance...
The present paper reviews the development of life course epidemiology since its origins during the 1...
The study of life-course socioeconomic disadvantage and health raises several important conceptual a...
We describe the principles of counterfactual thinking in providing more precise definitions of causa...
Epidemiologists are often interested in examining the effect on a later-life outcome of an exposure ...
none3siAccording to the biopsychosocial model, psychosocial and biological factors interact in a num...
There is growing recognition that the risk of many diseases in later life, such as type 2 diabetes o...
Epidemiologists are often interested in examining the effect on a later-life outcome of an exposure ...
In this article, we combine the extensive literature on the analysis of life-course trajectories as ...
In this article, we combine the extensive literature on the analysis of life-course trajectories as ...
Background: Although life course epidemiology is increasingly employed to conceptualize the determin...
© The Author 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the International Epidemiologic...