In a 1993 paper (Am J Epidemiol. 1993;137(1):1–8), Weinberg considered whether a variable that is associated with the outcome and is affected by exposure but is not an intermediate variable between exposure and outcome should be considered a confounder in etiologic studies. As an example, she examined the common practice of adjusting for history of spontaneous abortion when estimating the effect of an exposure on the risk of spontaneous abortion. She showed algebraically that such an adjustment could substantially bias the results even though history of spontaneous abortion would meet some definitions of a confounder. Directed acyclic graphs (DAGs) were introduced into epidemiology several years later as a tool with which to identify confou...
Confounding variables are variables that the researcher failed to control, or eliminate, damaging th...
Nonexperimental studies are increasingly used to investigate the safety and effectiveness of medical...
Advice regarding the analysis of observational studies of exposure effects usually is against adjust...
In a 1993 paper (Am J Epidemiol. 1993;137(1):1–8), Weinberg considered whether a variable that is as...
As confounding obscures the ‘real’ effect of an exposure on outcome, investigators performing etiolo...
AbstractConfounding is a major concern in epidemiology. Despite its significance, the different noti...
The goal of most epidemiological studies is to determine an unbiased estimate of the effect of being...
AbstractA statistically coherent view of confounding motivated by the over controversy over the prop...
The issue of confounding, and the bias it can induce, is a key concern in epidemiology, and yet ther...
The causal inference literature has provided a clear formal definition of confounding expressed in t...
In confounding, the effect of the exposure of interest is mixed with the effect of another variable....
This paper deals both with the issues of confounding and of control, as the definition of a confound...
Abstract Background The objective of most biomedical research is to determine an unbiased estimate o...
In observational studies, unobserved confounding is a major barrier in isolating the average causal ...
Graphical models are useful tools in causal inference, and causal directed acyclic graphs (DAGs) are...
Confounding variables are variables that the researcher failed to control, or eliminate, damaging th...
Nonexperimental studies are increasingly used to investigate the safety and effectiveness of medical...
Advice regarding the analysis of observational studies of exposure effects usually is against adjust...
In a 1993 paper (Am J Epidemiol. 1993;137(1):1–8), Weinberg considered whether a variable that is as...
As confounding obscures the ‘real’ effect of an exposure on outcome, investigators performing etiolo...
AbstractConfounding is a major concern in epidemiology. Despite its significance, the different noti...
The goal of most epidemiological studies is to determine an unbiased estimate of the effect of being...
AbstractA statistically coherent view of confounding motivated by the over controversy over the prop...
The issue of confounding, and the bias it can induce, is a key concern in epidemiology, and yet ther...
The causal inference literature has provided a clear formal definition of confounding expressed in t...
In confounding, the effect of the exposure of interest is mixed with the effect of another variable....
This paper deals both with the issues of confounding and of control, as the definition of a confound...
Abstract Background The objective of most biomedical research is to determine an unbiased estimate o...
In observational studies, unobserved confounding is a major barrier in isolating the average causal ...
Graphical models are useful tools in causal inference, and causal directed acyclic graphs (DAGs) are...
Confounding variables are variables that the researcher failed to control, or eliminate, damaging th...
Nonexperimental studies are increasingly used to investigate the safety and effectiveness of medical...
Advice regarding the analysis of observational studies of exposure effects usually is against adjust...