Validity, Bias, Confounding Flashcards

1
Q

External validity

A

Meaning of the study to the intended population

  • are results of study applicable to the real population?
  • are subjects comparable to the population?
  • is environment/exposure comparable or achievable in nature?
  • do findings relate to animals in the larger population?
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2
Q

Internal validity

A

Correct assessment of exposure and outcome in study groups

- concerns the formation of the comparison groups and measurement of exposure and disease

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3
Q

______ validity requires ____ validity, but not vice versa

A

External; internal

- ex: lab studies may have high internal validity, but limited external validity

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4
Q

Bias

A

Systematic error that results in an incorrect estimate in the relationship between exposure and disease

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5
Q

What is an example of observation bias?

A
  • scale that always reads 15 lbs underweight
  • doing a careful physical exam on exposed, and an abbreviated exam on nonexposed
  • in assessing response to 1 of 2 abx, you know which animals received your preferred abx
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6
Q

What is an example of selection bias?

A

Assigning the sickest animals to receive the new abx and the less sick your favorite abx

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7
Q

Bias renders the results ___

A

Worthless!

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8
Q

Selection bias

A

Concerns the animals who participate and those that do not

  • if the study involves treatment, who receives what treatment
  • do the animals reflect the target population -> external validity
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9
Q

Information bias

A

Assessment of exposures and outcomes

- how is it measured

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10
Q

Comparisons must be drawn from the same population

A

Selection bias

- loss to follow up

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11
Q

Any bias that relates to data collection

A

Information bias

  • observer bias
  • recall bias
  • misclassification
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12
Q

Differences in way information collected from E+ vs E-, or D+/-

A

Observer bias

  • observers are different between groups
  • observers have knowledge of group, treatment, or prior findings
  • observers rely on self training or experience
  • observers have a conflict of interest
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13
Q

Recall bias

A

Those D+ may tend to recall exposures in greater detail than those D-

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14
Q

Misclassification

A

When either D or E is not properly classified

- disease is diagnosed by producers, not veterinarians

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15
Q

Non-differential misclassification bias

A

Misclassification affects both D+ and D- to the same relative degree
- biases toward OR=1 (no effect)

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16
Q

When does differential misclassification happen?

A

When misclassification errors are uneven between outcome groups
- unequal misclassification could produce an exaggerated RR (further from 1)

17
Q

Confounding

A

Mixing of effects

18
Q

Confounding variable

A

Extraneous variable that can wholly or partly account for an apparent association between an exposure and outcome

  • produces spurious association or masks real association
  • correlated with explanatory and response variables
19
Q

Confounders are related to both _____ and _____

A

Exposure and the outcome

- mixing up of things effecting outcome cannot be separated and results cannot be interpreted

20
Q

Restriction

A

Restrict study subjects to avoid known confounding factors

  • vaccination is prevention of disease –> restrict to cases occurring after immunity could be operational
  • get rid of animals that are at extremely high risk for the outcome, but not necessarily anything to do with exposure
21
Q

Matching

A

Match pairs on a confounding variable so that confounding is distributed evenly between comparands

22
Q

Analysis

A
  • stratification

- multivariable techniques

23
Q

A large difference in crude RR and strata specific RR indicates ____

A

Confounding