Attributable risk estimation for adjusted disability multistate models: application to nosocomial infections
DOI10.1002/BIMJ.201100222zbMATH Open1400.62256OpenAlexW1496981068WikidataQ43708291 ScholiaQ43708291MaRDI QIDQ2919461FDOQ2919461
Authors: Jean-François Coeurjolly, Moliere Nguile-Makao, Jean-François Timsit, Benoit Liquet
Publication date: 2 October 2012
Published in: Biometrical Journal (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/bimj.201100222
Recommendations
- Multinomial additive hazard model to assess the disability burden using cross-sectional data
- Estimation of prolongation of hospital stay attributable to nosocomial infections: New approaches based on multistate models
- A Multiple State Model for Disability Using the Decomposition of Death Probabilities and Cross-Sectional Data
- Model-based estimation of the attributable risk in case-control and cohort studies
- A review of adjusted estimators of attributable risk
- Attributable Risk Estimation from Matched Case-Control Data
- Model-based estimates of population attributable risks for ordinal data
- Link-based survival additive models under mixed censoring to assess risks of hospital-acquired infections
proportional hazard modelmultistate modelsventilator-associated pneumoniaattributable risk/mortality
Cites Work
- Title not available (Why is that?)
- Statistical models based on counting processes
- A review of adjusted estimators of attributable risk
- Multi-state models: A review
- Application of multistate models in hospital epidemiology: advances and challenges
- Adjusting for time-varying confounding in the subdistribution analysis of a competing risk
- The Estimation and Interpretation of Attributable Risk in Health Research
- An Annotated Bibliography on the Attributable Risk
Cited In (5)
- Estimation of semi-Markov multi-state models: a comparison of the sojourn times and transition intensities approaches
- Estimating national disability risk
- Adjusting for time-varying confounding in the subdistribution analysis of a competing risk
- The population-attributable fraction for time-dependent exposures and competing risks -- A discussion on estimands
- Dealing with time-dependent exposures and confounding when defining and estimating attributable fractions -- revisiting estimands and estimators
This page was built for publication: Attributable risk estimation for adjusted disability multistate models: application to nosocomial infections
Report a bug (only for logged in users!)Click here to report a bug for this page (MaRDI item Q2919461)