1 / 23

Definition of Confounding

EPID 623-88 Introduction to Analysis and Interpretation of HIV/STD Data Confounding Manya Magnus, Ph.D. Summer 2001 adapted from M. O’Brien and P. Kissinger. Definition of Confounding.

norah
Download Presentation

Definition of Confounding

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EPID 623-88Introduction to Analysis and Interpretation of HIV/STD DataConfoundingManya Magnus, Ph.D.Summer 2001adapted from M. O’Brien and P. Kissinger

  2. Definition of Confounding • A non-causal association between a given exposure and an outcome is observed as a result of the influence of a third variable (or group of variables) designated as confounding variable(s).

  3. Rules of Confounding • The confounding variable is: • Causally associated with the outcome • Non-causally or causally associated with the exposure • Not an intermediate variable in the causal pathway between exposure and outcome

  4. Types of • Positive – overestimation of the true strength of association • Negative – underestimation of the true strength of association • Qualitative – inverse in the direction of the association

  5. Different strategies to assess confounding • Examine crude and adjusted estimates of the association • Stratification and examination of measures of association by strata

  6. Crude Associations

  7. More ideas about confounding • Partial confounding can occur (not an all or nothing thing) • Residual confounding (occurs when categories of confounders controlled for are too broad or when confounding variables remain unaccounted for)

  8. Collinearity

  9. Effect Modifiers

  10. Interaction • Two or more risk factors modify the effect of each other with regard to the occurrence or level of a given outcome • Also known as effect modification • Synergistic (positive interaction) – potentiates the effect of the exposure of interest • Antagonistic (negative interaction) – diminishes or eliminates the effect of the exposure of interest

  11. Confounding versus Interaction • Sometimes the same variable may be both a confounder and an effect modifier • Confounding makes it difficult to evaluate whether a statistical association is also causal • Interaction is part of the web of causation • Do not adjusted for a variable that is both a confounder and an effect modifer (reporting an average odds may be meaningless)

  12. Risk factors for sinusitis among HIV-infected persons in Multivariate logistic regression

More Related