Publication | Closed Access
An Introduction to Generalized Estimating Equations and an Application to Assess Selectivity Effects in a Longitudinal Study on Very Old Individuals
381
Citations
52
References
2004
Year
Correlation StructureAgingAssess Selectivity EffectsRegression AnalysisEpidemiology Of AgingSelectivity EffectsSocial SciencesLongevityPublic HealthStatisticsBehavioral SciencesGeriatricsEstimation StatisticGeneralized Estimating EquationsPopulation StudyLifespan AgingSociologyStatistical InferenceLater AdulthoodQuantitative Social Science ResearchActive AgeingDemographyMedicine
Correlated data are very common in the social sciences. Most common applications include longitudinal and hierarchically organized (or clustered) data. Generalized estimating equations (GEE) are a convenient and general approach to the analysis of several kinds of correlated data. The main advantage of GEE resides in the unbiased estimation of population-averaged regression coefficients despite possible misspecification of the correlation structure. This article aims to provide a concise, nonstatistical introduction to GEE. To illustrate the method, an analysis of selectivity effects in the Swiss Interdisciplinary Longitudinal Study on the Oldest Old is presented.
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