Good practices for quantitative bias analysis

Lash, TL; Fox, MP; MacLehose, RF; Maldonado, G; McCandless, LC; Greenland, S

HERO ID

3603676

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2014

Language

English

PMID

25080530

HERO ID 3603676
In Press No
Year 2014
Title Good practices for quantitative bias analysis
Authors Lash, TL; Fox, MP; MacLehose, RF; Maldonado, G; McCandless, LC; Greenland, S
Journal International Journal of Epidemiology
Volume 43
Issue 6
Page Numbers 1969-1985
Abstract Quantitative bias analysis serves several objectives in epidemiological research. First, it provides a quantitative estimate of the direction, magnitude and uncertainty arising from systematic errors. Second, the acts of identifying sources of systematic error, writing down models to quantify them, assigning values to the bias parameters and interpreting the results combat the human tendency towards overconfidence in research results, syntheses and critiques and the inferences that rest upon them. Finally, by suggesting aspects that dominate uncertainty in a particular research result or topic area, bias analysis can guide efficient allocation of sparse research resources. The fundamental methods of bias analyses have been known for decades, and there have been calls for more widespread use for nearly as long. There was a time when some believed that bias analyses were rarely undertaken because the methods were not widely known and because automated computing tools were not readily available to implement the methods. These shortcomings have been largely resolved. We must, therefore, contemplate other barriers to implementation. One possibility is that practitioners avoid the analyses because they lack confidence in the practice of bias analysis. The purpose of this paper is therefore to describe what we view as good practices for applying quantitative bias analysis to epidemiological data, directed towards those familiar with the methods. We focus on answering questions often posed to those of us who advocate incorporation of bias analysis methods into teaching and research. These include the following. When is bias analysis practical and productive? How does one select the biases that ought to be addressed? How does one select a method to model biases? How does one assign values to the parameters of a bias model? How does one present and interpret a bias analysis?. We hope that our guide to good practices for conducting and presenting bias analyses will encourage more widespread use of bias analysis to estimate the potential magnitude and direction of biases, as well as the uncertainty in estimates potentially influenced by the biases.
Doi 10.1093/ije/dyu149
Pmid 25080530
Wosid WOS:000348575500038
Url https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/good-practices-quantitative-bias-analysis/docview/1701487391/se-2?accountid=171501
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword epidemiological biases; analysis; best practice