INTRACLASS CORRELATION AMONG COMMON MEASURES OF ADOLESCENT SMOKING - ESTIMATES, CORRELATES, AND APPLICATIONS IN SMOKING PREVENTION STUDIES

被引:105
作者
MURRAY, DM
ROONEY, BL
HANNAN, PJ
PETERSON, AV
ARY, DV
BIGLAN, A
BOTVIN, GJ
EVANS, RI
FLAY, BR
FUTTERMAN, R
GETZ, JG
MAREK, PM
ORLANDI, M
PENTZ, MA
PERRY, CL
SCHINKE, SP
机构
[1] GUNDERSON MED FDN,LA CROSSE,WI
[2] FRED HUTCHINSON CANC RES CTR,SEATTLE,WA 98104
[3] OREGON RES INST,EUGENE,OR 97403
[4] CORNELL UNIV,COLL MED,HLTH BEHAV RES LAB,NEW YORK,NY
[5] UNIV HOUSTON,DEPT PSYCHOL,HOUSTON,TX
[6] PREVENT RES CTR,CHICAGO,IL
[7] AMER HLTH FDN,NEW YORK,NY 10017
[8] UNIV SO CALIF,INST PREVENT RES,ALHAMBRA,CA
[9] COLUMBIA UNIV,SCH SOCIAL WORK,NEW YORK,NY
关键词
ADOLESCENCE; CLUSTERING; EPIDEMIOLOGIC METHODS; RESEARCH DESIGN; SMOKING; STATISTICS;
D O I
10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a117194
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Most adolescent smoking prevention studies employ designs in which classrooms, schools, school districts, or sometimes whole communities are assigned to treatment conditions while observations are made on individual students. The critical design feature in such community trials is the nesting of intact social groups within treatment conditions. This combination requires that the treatment effect be assessed against the between-group variance; unfortunately, that variance is usually larger than for randomly constituted groups and its precision is usually less than that for the within-group variance. These factors often combine to reduce power so that it is almost impossible to detect important treatment effects in an otherwise well designed and properly executed study. To address these problems, investigators need good estimates of the intraclass correlation for the variables of interest, which together with the number of observations per unit determine the magnitude of the extra variation in the nested design. The purpose of this paper is to describe the methods and results from a study designed to generate estimates of intraclass correlation for common outcomes in adolescent smoking prevention studies and to discuss the use of these estimates in the planning of new studies.
引用
收藏
页码:1038 / 1050
页数:13
相关论文
共 32 条
[1]   THE MINNESOTA SMOKING PREVENTION PROGRAM - A 7TH-GRADE HEALTH CURRICULUM SUPPLEMENT [J].
ARKIN, RM ;
ROEMHILD, HF ;
JOHNSON, CA ;
LUEPKER, RV ;
MURRAY, DM .
JOURNAL OF SCHOOL HEALTH, 1981, 51 (09) :611-616
[2]   THE EFFICACY OF SOCIAL-INFLUENCE PREVENTION PROGRAMS VERSUS STANDARD CARE - ARE NEW INITIATIVES NEEDED [J].
ARY, DV ;
BIGLAN, A ;
GLASGOW, R ;
ZOREF, L ;
BLACK, C ;
OCHS, L ;
SEVERSON, H ;
KELLY, R ;
WEISSMAN, W ;
LICHTENSTEIN, E ;
BROZOVSKY, P ;
WIRT, R ;
JAMES, L .
JOURNAL OF BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE, 1990, 13 (03) :281-296
[3]  
Byrk A.S., 1992, HIERARCHICAL LINEAR
[4]   DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS IN THE ESTIMATION OF INTRA-CLASS CORRELATION [J].
DONNER, A ;
KOVAL, JJ .
ANNALS OF HUMAN GENETICS, 1982, 46 (JUL) :271-277
[5]   RANDOMIZATION BY CLUSTER - SAMPLE-SIZE REQUIREMENTS AND ANALYSIS [J].
DONNER, A ;
BIRKETT, N ;
BUCK, C .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1981, 114 (06) :906-914
[6]   PREDICTORS OF SMOKING PREVALENCE AMONG NEW-YORK LATINO YOUTH [J].
DUSENBURY, L ;
KERNER, JF ;
BAKER, E ;
BOTVIN, G ;
JAMESORTIZ, S ;
ZAUBER, A .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 1992, 82 (01) :55-58
[7]   ESTIMATING INTERVENTION EFFECTS IN LONGITUDINAL-STUDIES [J].
DWYER, JH ;
MACKINNON, DP ;
PENTZ, MA ;
FLAY, BR ;
HANSEN, WB ;
WANG, EYI ;
JOHNSON, CA .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1989, 130 (04) :781-795
[8]   COHORT VERSUS CROSS-SECTIONAL DESIGN IN LARGE FIELD TRIALS - PRECISION, SAMPLE-SIZE, AND A UNIFYING MODEL [J].
FELDMAN, HA ;
MCKINLAY, SM .
STATISTICS IN MEDICINE, 1994, 13 (01) :61-78
[9]   CORRELATED BINOMIAL VARIATES - PROPERTIES OF ESTIMATOR OF INTRACLASS CORRELATION AND ITS EFFECT ON SAMPLE-SIZE CALCULATION [J].
FENG, ZD ;
GRIZZLE, JE .
STATISTICS IN MEDICINE, 1992, 11 (12) :1607-1614
[10]   THE TELEVISION SCHOOL AND FAMILY SMOKING PREVENTION AND CESSATION PROJECT .1. THEORETICAL BASIS AND PROGRAM-DEVELOPMENT [J].
FLAY, BR ;
BRANNON, BR ;
JOHNSON, CA ;
HANSEN, WB ;
ULENE, AL ;
WHITNEYSALTIEL, DA ;
GLEASON, LR ;
SUSSMAN, S ;
GAVIN, MD ;
GLOWACZ, KM ;
SOBOL, DF ;
SPIEGEL, DC .
PREVENTIVE MEDICINE, 1988, 17 (05) :585-607