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American Journal of Epidemiology Vol. 131, No. 2: 365-372
Copyright © 1990 by The Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health


research-article

THE USE OF RESIDUALS FOR LONGITUDINAL DATA ANALYSIS: THE EXAMPLE OF CHILD GROWTH

STEVEN A. ESREY1,, GEORGE CASELLA2 and JEAN-PIERRE HABICHT3

1Department of International Health, The Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health Baltimore, MD
2Biometrics Unit Cornell University Ithaca, NY
3Division of Nutritional Sciences, Cornell University Ithaca, NY

Reprint requests to Dr. Steven A. Esrey, Department of International Health, The Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe St, Baltimore, MD 21205

Health impact evaluations often measure changes in health status over part of a total life experience. The effects on health up to and including the start of the evaluation, which are embodied in the measure of initial health status, need to be removed while examining the effects that other variables exert during the evaluation period on final health status. Statistical models, which include initial health status as a covariate while examining the effects of other variables during the evaluation, confound the effects of a determinant during evaluation with preevaluatlon effects, because they do not differentiate between effects produced at different times by the same determinant A residual model removes the preevaluatlon effects by regressing final health status on initial health status. The residuals from this regression are then regressed on the other predictor variables. In this paper, standard covarlate adjustment, which includes all effects simultaneously, is compared with a two-part residual model using child growth as an example. The simultaneous model over- and underpredicts growth relative to the residual model depending on the age and initial body size of a child. In general, whenever initial (preintervention) and final (postinterventlon) measures of health outcome exist, the residual model should be considered on the basis of biologic and epidemiologic consideration, not solely on statistical optirnality.

anthropometry; child; growth; statistics


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