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Area Disease Estimation Based on Sentinel Hospital Records

BACKGROUND: Population health attributes (such as disease incidence and prevalence) are often estimated using sentinel hospital records, which are subject to multiple sources of uncertainty. When applied to these health attributes, commonly used biased estimation techniques can lead to false conclus...

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Autores principales: Wang, Jin-Feng, Reis, Ben Y., Hu, Mao-Gui, Christakos, George, Yang, Wei-Zhong, Sun, Qiao, Li, Zhong-Jie, Li, Xiao-Zhou, Lai, Sheng-Jie, Chen, Hong-Yan, Wang, Dao-Chen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3160318/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21886791
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023428
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author Wang, Jin-Feng
Reis, Ben Y.
Hu, Mao-Gui
Christakos, George
Yang, Wei-Zhong
Sun, Qiao
Li, Zhong-Jie
Li, Xiao-Zhou
Lai, Sheng-Jie
Chen, Hong-Yan
Wang, Dao-Chen
author_facet Wang, Jin-Feng
Reis, Ben Y.
Hu, Mao-Gui
Christakos, George
Yang, Wei-Zhong
Sun, Qiao
Li, Zhong-Jie
Li, Xiao-Zhou
Lai, Sheng-Jie
Chen, Hong-Yan
Wang, Dao-Chen
author_sort Wang, Jin-Feng
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Population health attributes (such as disease incidence and prevalence) are often estimated using sentinel hospital records, which are subject to multiple sources of uncertainty. When applied to these health attributes, commonly used biased estimation techniques can lead to false conclusions and ineffective disease intervention and control. Although some estimators can account for measurement error (in the form of white noise, usually after de-trending), most mainstream health statistics techniques cannot generate unbiased and minimum error variance estimates when the available data are biased. METHODS AND FINDINGS: A new technique, called the Biased Sample Hospital-based Area Disease Estimation (B-SHADE), is introduced that generates space-time population disease estimates using biased hospital records. The effectiveness of the technique is empirically evaluated in terms of hospital records of disease incidence (for hand-foot-mouth disease and fever syndrome cases) in Shanghai (China) during a two-year period. The B-SHADE technique uses a weighted summation of sentinel hospital records to derive unbiased and minimum error variance estimates of area incidence. The calculation of these weights is the outcome of a process that combines: the available space-time information; a rigorous assessment of both, the horizontal relationships between hospital records and the vertical links between each hospital's records and the overall disease situation in the region. In this way, the representativeness of the sentinel hospital records was improved, the possible biases of these records were corrected, and the generated area incidence estimates were best linear unbiased estimates (BLUE). Using the same hospital records, the performance of the B-SHADE technique was compared against two mainstream estimators. CONCLUSIONS: The B-SHADE technique involves a hospital network-based model that blends the optimal estimation features of the Block Kriging method and the sample bias correction efficiency of the ratio estimator method. In this way, B-SHADE can overcome the limitations of both methods: Block Kriging's inadequacy concerning the correction of sample bias and spatial clustering; and the ratio estimator's limitation as regards error minimization. The generality of the B-SHADE technique is further demonstrated by the fact that it reduces to Block Kriging in the case of unbiased samples; to ratio estimator if there is no correlation between hospitals; and to simple statistic if the hospital records are neither biased nor space-time correlated. In addition to the theoretical advantages of the B-SHADE technique over the two other methods above, two real world case studies (hand-foot-mouth disease and fever syndrome cases) demonstrated its empirical superiority, as well.
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spelling pubmed-31603182011-08-30 Area Disease Estimation Based on Sentinel Hospital Records Wang, Jin-Feng Reis, Ben Y. Hu, Mao-Gui Christakos, George Yang, Wei-Zhong Sun, Qiao Li, Zhong-Jie Li, Xiao-Zhou Lai, Sheng-Jie Chen, Hong-Yan Wang, Dao-Chen PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Population health attributes (such as disease incidence and prevalence) are often estimated using sentinel hospital records, which are subject to multiple sources of uncertainty. When applied to these health attributes, commonly used biased estimation techniques can lead to false conclusions and ineffective disease intervention and control. Although some estimators can account for measurement error (in the form of white noise, usually after de-trending), most mainstream health statistics techniques cannot generate unbiased and minimum error variance estimates when the available data are biased. METHODS AND FINDINGS: A new technique, called the Biased Sample Hospital-based Area Disease Estimation (B-SHADE), is introduced that generates space-time population disease estimates using biased hospital records. The effectiveness of the technique is empirically evaluated in terms of hospital records of disease incidence (for hand-foot-mouth disease and fever syndrome cases) in Shanghai (China) during a two-year period. The B-SHADE technique uses a weighted summation of sentinel hospital records to derive unbiased and minimum error variance estimates of area incidence. The calculation of these weights is the outcome of a process that combines: the available space-time information; a rigorous assessment of both, the horizontal relationships between hospital records and the vertical links between each hospital's records and the overall disease situation in the region. In this way, the representativeness of the sentinel hospital records was improved, the possible biases of these records were corrected, and the generated area incidence estimates were best linear unbiased estimates (BLUE). Using the same hospital records, the performance of the B-SHADE technique was compared against two mainstream estimators. CONCLUSIONS: The B-SHADE technique involves a hospital network-based model that blends the optimal estimation features of the Block Kriging method and the sample bias correction efficiency of the ratio estimator method. In this way, B-SHADE can overcome the limitations of both methods: Block Kriging's inadequacy concerning the correction of sample bias and spatial clustering; and the ratio estimator's limitation as regards error minimization. The generality of the B-SHADE technique is further demonstrated by the fact that it reduces to Block Kriging in the case of unbiased samples; to ratio estimator if there is no correlation between hospitals; and to simple statistic if the hospital records are neither biased nor space-time correlated. In addition to the theoretical advantages of the B-SHADE technique over the two other methods above, two real world case studies (hand-foot-mouth disease and fever syndrome cases) demonstrated its empirical superiority, as well. Public Library of Science 2011-08-23 /pmc/articles/PMC3160318/ /pubmed/21886791 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023428 Text en Wang et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wang, Jin-Feng
Reis, Ben Y.
Hu, Mao-Gui
Christakos, George
Yang, Wei-Zhong
Sun, Qiao
Li, Zhong-Jie
Li, Xiao-Zhou
Lai, Sheng-Jie
Chen, Hong-Yan
Wang, Dao-Chen
Area Disease Estimation Based on Sentinel Hospital Records
title Area Disease Estimation Based on Sentinel Hospital Records
title_full Area Disease Estimation Based on Sentinel Hospital Records
title_fullStr Area Disease Estimation Based on Sentinel Hospital Records
title_full_unstemmed Area Disease Estimation Based on Sentinel Hospital Records
title_short Area Disease Estimation Based on Sentinel Hospital Records
title_sort area disease estimation based on sentinel hospital records
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3160318/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21886791
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0023428
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