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BMC Public Health 2011
Age adjustment in ecological studies: using a study on arsenic ingestion and bladder cancer as an exampleKeywords: ecological study, age adjustment, direct standardization, indirect standardization, standardized morbidity ratio, arsenic, drinking water, bladder cancer Abstract: A total of 3068 cases of bladder cancer, including 2276 men and 792 women, were identified during a ten-year study period in the study townships. Three methods were applied to analyze the same data set on the ten-year study period. The first (Direct Method) applied direct standardization to obtain standardized incidence rate and then used it as the dependent variable in the regression analysis. The second (Indirect Method) applied indirect standardization to obtain standardized incidence ratio and then used it as the dependent variable in the regression analysis instead. The third (Variable Method) used proportions of residents in different age groups as a part of the independent variables in the multiple regression models.All three methods showed a statistically significant positive association between arsenic exposure above 0.64 mg/L and incidence of bladder cancer in men and women, but different results were observed for the other exposure categories. In addition, the risk estimates obtained by different methods for the same exposure category were all different.Using an empirical example, the current study confirmed the argument made by other researchers previously that whereas the three different methods of age adjustment may lead to different conclusions, only the third approach can obtain unbiased estimates of the risks. The third method can also generate estimates of the risk associated with each age group, but the other two are unable to evaluate the effects of age directly.In spite of their limitations, ecologic studies are often used in epidemiologic research. These studies gather study participants into groups, mostly according to the geographic area of residence, and treat the whole group of people as a unit [1]. In ecological studies, distribution of age in the unit population may affect the results, and therefore evaluating and adjusting for age effects are desirable in many cases. In regression analyses, a common approach is to apply direct standardiz
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