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The importance of post hoc approaches for overcoming non-response and attrition bias in population-sampled studies
by
Gray, Linsay
in
Alcohol
/ Bias
/ Commentary (Invited)
/ Drug use
/ Epidemiologic Research Design
/ Epidemiology
/ Follow-Up Studies
/ Humans
/ Invited
/ Latent class analysis
/ Longitudinal studies
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Missing data
/ Participation
/ Population
/ Psychiatry
/ Public health
/ Sociodemographics
/ Substance abuse
/ Substance-Related Disorders - epidemiology
/ Surveys
2016
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The importance of post hoc approaches for overcoming non-response and attrition bias in population-sampled studies
by
Gray, Linsay
in
Alcohol
/ Bias
/ Commentary (Invited)
/ Drug use
/ Epidemiologic Research Design
/ Epidemiology
/ Follow-Up Studies
/ Humans
/ Invited
/ Latent class analysis
/ Longitudinal studies
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Missing data
/ Participation
/ Population
/ Psychiatry
/ Public health
/ Sociodemographics
/ Substance abuse
/ Substance-Related Disorders - epidemiology
/ Surveys
2016
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Do you wish to request the book?
The importance of post hoc approaches for overcoming non-response and attrition bias in population-sampled studies
by
Gray, Linsay
in
Alcohol
/ Bias
/ Commentary (Invited)
/ Drug use
/ Epidemiologic Research Design
/ Epidemiology
/ Follow-Up Studies
/ Humans
/ Invited
/ Latent class analysis
/ Longitudinal studies
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Missing data
/ Participation
/ Population
/ Psychiatry
/ Public health
/ Sociodemographics
/ Substance abuse
/ Substance-Related Disorders - epidemiology
/ Surveys
2016
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The importance of post hoc approaches for overcoming non-response and attrition bias in population-sampled studies
Journal Article
The importance of post hoc approaches for overcoming non-response and attrition bias in population-sampled studies
2016
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Overview
Population-based health studies are critical resources for monitoring population health and related factors such as substance use, but reliable inference can be compromised in various ways. Non-response and attrition are major methodological problems which reduce power and can hamper the generalizability of findings if individuals who participate and who remain in a study differ systematically from those who do not. In this issue of SPPE, McCabe et al. studied participants of the 2001–2002 National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions, comparing attrition in Wave 2 across participants with different patterns of substance use at Wave 1. The implications of differential follow-up and further possibilities for addressing selective participation are discussed.
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg,Springer,Springer Nature B.V
Subject
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