Publication | Open Access
Educational note: addressing special cases of bias that frequently occur in perinatal epidemiology
89
Citations
50
References
2020
Year
Family MedicineReproductive HealthReproductive EpidemiologyHigh-risk PregnancyEducational NoteClinical EpidemiologyPrenatal CarePublic HealthDevelopmental EpidemiologySexual And Reproductive HealthSpecial CasesInfertilityMaternal Cardiovascular OutcomeMaternal ComplicationInformation BiasesEarly Childhood DevelopmentPotential PitfallsMaternal HealthPerinatal EpidemiologyEpidemiologyAbortionPediatricsPregnancyPreterm BirthMedicineWomen's Health
The epidemiologic study of pregnancy and birth outcomes may be hindered by several unique and challenging issues. Pregnancy is a time-limited period in which severe cohort attrition takes place between conception and birth and adverse outcomes are complex and multi-factorial. Biases span those familiar to epidemiologists: selection, confounding and information biases. Specific challenges include conditioning on potential intermediates, how to treat race/ethnicity, and influential windows of prolonged, seasonal and potentially time-varying exposures. Researchers studying perinatal outcomes should be cognizant of the potential pitfalls due to these factors and address their implications with respect to formulating questions of interest, choice of an appropriate analysis approach and interpretations of findings given assumptions. In this article, we catalogue some of the more important potential sources of bias in perinatal epidemiology that have more recently gained attention in the literature, provide the epidemiologic context behind each issue and propose practices for dealing with each issue to the extent possible.
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