Relative Incidence Estimation from Case Series for Vaccine Safety Evaluation
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Publication:4844320
DOI10.2307/2533328zbMATH Open0825.62808OpenAlexW2326455719WikidataQ52348685 ScholiaQ52348685MaRDI QIDQ4844320FDOQ4844320
Authors: C. Paddy Farrington
Publication date: 28 November 1995
Published in: Biometrics (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: https://doi.org/10.2307/2533328
Cited In (19)
- The association between multidose vaccinations and death: comparing case series methods when the first exposure changes the general risk of an event
- Existence and uniqueness of relative incidence estimates in case-series analysis
- Semiparametric Analysis of Case Series Data
- Evaluation strategies for case series: is Cox regression an alternative to the self controlled case series method for terminal events?
- Flexible modelling of vaccine effect in self-controlled case series models
- Case‐base methods for studying vaccination safety
- Estimation and reduction of bias in self-controlled case series with non-rare event dependent outcomes and heterogeneous populations
- Measurement error case series models with application to infection-cardiovascular risk in older patients on dialysis
- A positive event dependence model for self-controlled case series with applications in postmarketing surveillance
- Self-controlled case series analyses: small-sample performance
- Adjusting for both sequential testing and systematic error in safety surveillance using observational data: empirical calibration and MaxSPRT
- Hierarchical models for multiple, rare outcomes using massive observational healthcare databases
- Self-controlled case series with multiple event types
- Case series analysis for censored, perturbed, or curtailed post-event exposures
- Multiple self-controlled case series for large-scale longitudinal observational databases
- A case-base sampling method for estimating recurrent event intensities
- Naive hypothesis testing for case series analysis with time-varying exposure onset measurement error: inference for infection-cardiovascular risk in patients on dialysis
- Signal detection of adverse events with imperfect confirmation rates in vaccine safety studies using self-controlled case series design
- Bias and estimation under misspecification of the risk period in self-controlled case series studies
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