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Epidemiological Methods in Studies of Symptoms in Advanced Disease
Author Bios
Why Study Advanced Disease?
Why Epidemiology?
Incidence and Prevalence
Using Incidence and Prevalence
Definition of a Case
Defining Time, Place, Person
Types of Study Design
Cross-Sectional Studies
Longitudinal Studies
Measurement
Bias
Currently selected selection: Selection Bias
Measurement Bias
Presenting and Interpreting Results
Practical Example
Calculating Prevalence
Conclusion


Chapter 19: Epidemiological Methods in Studies of Symptoms in Advanced Disease: Selection Bias
         


Selection bias occurs when the subjects studied are not representative of the target population about which conclusions are drawn.

Target population › Study population › Study sample

For example, if you wish to estimate the prevalence of pain among advanced cancer patients (the target population), the choice of the study population and of the study sample can be crucial in influencing the results. Table 1 demonstrates how different results have been obtained from studies of heterogeneous populations.

Table 12.1 Prevalence of Pain in Some Different Studies
Author N % with pain Stage Source
Foley 1979
397
38
all stages
cancer hospital
Pannuti et al 1980
291
64
advanced
oncology dept
Trotter et al 1981
237
72
advanced
oncology outpatients
Foley 1979
39
60
far advanced
hospice
Haram 1978
607
66
far advanced
hospice
Twycross 1974
500
84
far advanced
hospice
Wilkes 1974
300
58
far advanced
hospice

In symptom studies it is usually impossible to obtain complete assessments for the entire study sample, and the analyses are performed on the subgroup of patients for whom symptoms were evaluated. This can lead to bias if the distribution of symptoms is different among the subgroup of non-responders compared with responders. For example, a study assessing patients with HIV/AIDS in a palliative care service found more severe symptoms among those patients who were unable to self-complete questionnaires (Butters, Higginson, et al., 1992; Butters, Higginson, et al., 1993).

Note that an acceptable level of response (the compliance rate) does not exist -- it depends on the expected range of error that we can accept as not being relevant for the research question.

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