Difference between revisions of "Referral bias"

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Referral bias (admission rate bias) refers to a situation where the chance of exposed cases being admitted to the study differs from exposed controls. This frequently happens when cases are selected in a hospital whose activity is linked to the studied exposure. The admission rate bias may be due to a number of factors e.g. access to care, the popularity of certain hospitals/ doctors etc. <Ref name="Sackett">Sackett DL. Bias in analytic research. J Chronic Dis. 1979; 32(1-2):51-63.</ref>.
  
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In hospital-based studies, if the admission rates to hospitals differ for different disease/exposure groups (e.g. admission rates of exposed and unexposed cases and controls differ), the association between exposure and disease will be distorted, and the relative odds of exposure to the putative cause may be spuriously increased or reduced. This bias is also known as Berkson's bias <Ref name="Sackett"/>.
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Example: in a study of risk factors for lung cancer, cases were compared to controls with a history of exposure to asbestos. Cases were recruited in the respiratory department of a hospital which is the National Reference Centre for Asbestosis. Controls were selected in the surgical wards of the same hospital. In that situation, it is likely that lung cancer cases of this respiratory department do not represent other cases with a history of asbestos exposure. Here, the selection of cases is linked to exposure. Selected cases are more likely to have been exposed to asbestos (than other lung cancer cases in the population), with an overestimation of 'a', resulting in an overestimation of the odds ratio.
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{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center;"
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|- style="font-weight:bold;"
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! style="vertical-align:middle; text-align:left;" | Exposure
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! style="vertical-align:middle;" | Cases of lung  cancer
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! style="vertical-align:middle;" | Controls from  surgical wards
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! style="background-color:#F0F8FF;" | OR
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|-
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| style="vertical-align:middle; font-style:italic; text-align:left;" | Contact with asbestos
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| style="vertical-align:middle;" | a↑
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| style="vertical-align:middle;" | b
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| style="background-color:#F0F8FF;" | OR↑
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|-
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| style="vertical-align:middle; font-style:italic; text-align:left;" | No contact with asbestos
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| style="vertical-align:middle;" | c
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| style="vertical-align:middle;" | d
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| style="background-color:#F0F8FF;" | reference
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|- style="text-align:left;"
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| style="vertical-align:middle;" | Total
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| style="vertical-align:middle;" |
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| style="vertical-align:middle;" |
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| style="background-color:#F0F8FF;" |
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|}
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<div style="display: inline-block; width: 25%; vertical-align: top; border: 1px solid #000; background-color: #d7effc; padding: 10px; margin: 5px;">
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'''FEM PAGE CONTRIBUTORS 2007'''
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;Contributor
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:Arnold Bosman
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</div>
 
[[Category:Selection bias and case-control studies]]
 
[[Category:Selection bias and case-control studies]]

Latest revision as of 05:17, 14 April 2023

Referral bias (admission rate bias) refers to a situation where the chance of exposed cases being admitted to the study differs from exposed controls. This frequently happens when cases are selected in a hospital whose activity is linked to the studied exposure. The admission rate bias may be due to a number of factors e.g. access to care, the popularity of certain hospitals/ doctors etc. [1].

In hospital-based studies, if the admission rates to hospitals differ for different disease/exposure groups (e.g. admission rates of exposed and unexposed cases and controls differ), the association between exposure and disease will be distorted, and the relative odds of exposure to the putative cause may be spuriously increased or reduced. This bias is also known as Berkson's bias [1].

Example: in a study of risk factors for lung cancer, cases were compared to controls with a history of exposure to asbestos. Cases were recruited in the respiratory department of a hospital which is the National Reference Centre for Asbestosis. Controls were selected in the surgical wards of the same hospital. In that situation, it is likely that lung cancer cases of this respiratory department do not represent other cases with a history of asbestos exposure. Here, the selection of cases is linked to exposure. Selected cases are more likely to have been exposed to asbestos (than other lung cancer cases in the population), with an overestimation of 'a', resulting in an overestimation of the odds ratio.

Exposure Cases of lung cancer Controls from surgical wards OR
Contact with asbestos a↑ b OR↑
No contact with asbestos c d reference
Total


FEM PAGE CONTRIBUTORS 2007

Contributor
Arnold Bosman
  1. 1.0 1.1 Sackett DL. Bias in analytic research. J Chronic Dis. 1979; 32(1-2):51-63.

Contributors