American Journal of Epidemiology Vol. 139, No. 3: 302-311
Copyright © 1994 by The Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health
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Characteristics of a Hypothetical Group of Hospital Controls for a Case-Control Study
1Department of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, Columbia University New York, NY
4Research Institute, Mary Imogene Bassett Hospital Cooperstown, NY
5Division of Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Columbia University New York, NY
6G. Sergievsky Center of the Faculty of Medicine, Columbia University New York, NY
7New York State Psychiatric Institute New York, NY
Repnnt requests to Dr. Sara H. Olson, Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, State University of New York at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY 14214
In case-control studies in which cases are ascertained from hospitals, controls are frequently chosen from among patients with other diseases at the same hospitals. This study was undertaken to examine the extent to which a hospital control group is representative of the population to which inferences are made. A hypothetical hospital control group was assembled consisting of 233 men and women aged 4074 years who were surgical inpatients at the two hospitals in Otsego County, New York, in 1990. The characteristics of this group were compared with the characteristics of 15,563 men and women aged 4074 years who participated in a privately conducted health census in the same county in 1989 with the use of health-related data collected in the census. In this rural setting, only small differences were found between the hospital control group and the census population on most of the measures considered, including demographic characteristics, certain health behaviors, and the prevalence of common conditions. However, the female hospital controls were more likely to be overweight than the females enumerated in the census, and the men were more likely to have ever smoked cigarettes. These differences were large enough to lead to different interpretations about the strength of the associations between these variables and case-control status.
case-control studies; epidemiologic methods
2Current address:Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, SUNY at Buffalo,Buffalo, NY
3Current address: Division of Epidemiology, Stanford School of Medicine,Stanford, CA
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