Case-Crossover Method with a Short Time-Window

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17010202

Language of the publication
English
Date
2019-12-27
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Szyszkowicz, Mieczysław
Publisher
MDPI

Abstract

Numerous epidemiological studies have shown associations between short-term ambient air pollution exposure and various health problems. The time-stratified case-crossover design is a popular technique for estimating these associations. In the standard approach, the case-crossover model is realized by using a conditional logistic regression on data that are interpreted as a set of cases (i.e., individual health events) and controls. In statistical calculations, for each case record, three or four corresponding control records are considered. Here, the case-crossover model is realized as a conditional Poisson regression on counts with stratum indicators. Such an approach enables the reduction of the number of data records that are used in the numerical calculations. In this presentation, the method used analyzes daily counts on the shortest possible time-window, which is composed of two consecutive days. The proposed technique is positively tested on four challenging simulated datasets, for which classical time-series methods fail. The methodology presented here also suggests that the length of exposure (i.e., size of the time-window) may be associated with the severity of health conditions.

Plain language summary

Health Canada is responsible for conducting risk assessments on air pollution as part of the Clean Air Regulatory Agenda. There is growing evidence suggesting that ambient air pollution can affect various aspects of the human health. The study investigated methodology related to estimating the health risk in short-term (acute) exposure to air pollutants. The proposed technique allows the more accurate determination of the associated risks. The method is relatively simple and easy to use. These data and technique add to the body of knowledge used in assessing population health impacts.

Subject

  • Health,
  • Health and safety

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Collection(s)

Healthy environments, consumer safety and consumer products

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