Ecologic versus individual-level sources of bias in ecologic estimates of contextual health effects

被引:210
作者
Greenland, S [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Sch Publ Hlth, Dept Epidemiol, Topanga, CA 90290 USA
[2] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Coll Letters & Sci, Dept Stat, Topanga, CA 90290 USA
关键词
aggregate studies; confounding; contextual studies; ecologic fallacy; ecologic studies; environmental health; epidemiology; multilevel studies; relative risk; risk assessment;
D O I
10.1093/ije/30.6.1343
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
A number of authors have attempted to defend ecologic (aggregate) studies by claiming that the goal of those Studies is estimation of ecologic (contextual or group-level) effects rather than individual-level effects. Critics of these attempts point out that ecologic effect estimates are inevitably used as estimates of individual effects, despite disclaimers. A. more subtle problem is that ecologic variation in the distribution of individual effects can bias ecologic estimates of contextual effects. The conditions leading to this bias are plausible and perhaps even common in studies of ecosocial factors and health outcomes because social context is not randomized across typical analysis units (administrative regions). By definition, ecologic data contain only marginal observations on the joint distribution of individually defined confounders and outcomes, and so identify neither contextual nor individual-level effects. While ecologic studies can still be useful given appropriate caveats, their problems are better addressed by multilevel study designs, which obtain and use individual as well as group-level data. Nonetheless, such studies often share certain special: problems with ecologic studies, including problems due to inappropriate aggregation and problems due to temporal changes in covariate distributions.
引用
收藏
页码:1343 / 1350
页数:8
相关论文
共 72 条
[61]   ON THE RELIABILITY AND PRECISION OF WITHIN AND BETWEEN POPULATION ESTIMATES OF RELATIVE RATE PARAMETERS [J].
SHEPPARD, L ;
PRENTICE, RL .
BIOMETRICS, 1995, 51 (03) :853-863
[62]  
SHEPPARD L, 2002, IN PRESS BIOSTATISTI
[63]   ROLE OF ECOLOGIC ANALYSIS IN STUDIES OF ETIOLOGY OF DISEASE - DISCUSSION WITH REFERENCE TO LARGE BOWEL CANCER [J].
STAVRAKY, KM .
JOURNAL OF CHRONIC DISEASES, 1976, 29 (07) :435-444
[64]   ASSESSMENT OF ECOLOGIC REGRESSION IN TILE STUDY OF LUNG-CANCER AND INDOOR RADON [J].
STIDLEY, CA ;
SAMET, JM .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1994, 139 (03) :312-322
[65]  
Stoto MA, 1998, PUBLIC HEALTH REP, V113, P182
[66]   Choosing a future for epidemiology .2. From black box to Chinese boxes and eco-epidemiology [J].
Susser, M ;
Susser, E .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 1996, 86 (05) :674-677
[67]   THE LOGIC IN ECOLOGICAL .1. THE LOGIC OF ANALYSIS [J].
SUSSER, M .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 1994, 84 (05) :825-829
[68]   IMPACT OF HETEROGENEITY IN INDIVIDUAL FRAILTY ON THE DYNAMICS OF MORTALITY [J].
VAUPEL, JW ;
MANTON, KG ;
STALLARD, E .
DEMOGRAPHY, 1979, 16 (03) :439-454
[69]   MULTILEVEL ANALYSIS IN EPIDEMIOLOGIC RESEARCH ON HEALTH BEHAVIORS AND OUTCOMES [J].
VONKORFF, M ;
KOEPSELL, T ;
CURRY, S ;
DIEHR, P .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 1992, 135 (10) :1077-1082
[70]   A statistical framework for ecological and aggregate studies [J].
Wakefield, J ;
Salway, R .
JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL STATISTICAL SOCIETY SERIES A-STATISTICS IN SOCIETY, 2001, 164 :119-137