Ecological Bias, Confounding, and Effect Modification

Greenland S (Division of Epidemiology, UCLA School of Public Health, Los Angeles, California 90024, USA) and Morgenstern H. Ecological bias, confounding, and effect modification. International Journal of Epidemiology 1989, 18 : 269–274. Ecological bias is sometimes attributed to confounding by the g...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:International Journal of Epidemiology
Main Authors: GREENLAND, SANDER, MORGENSTERN, HAL
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 1989
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ije.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/short/18/1/269
https://doi.org/10.1093/ije/18.1.269
Description
Summary:Greenland S (Division of Epidemiology, UCLA School of Public Health, Los Angeles, California 90024, USA) and Morgenstern H. Ecological bias, confounding, and effect modification. International Journal of Epidemiology 1989, 18 : 269–274. Ecological bias is sometimes attributed to confounding by the group variable (ie the variable used to define the ecological groups), or to risk factors associated with the group variable. We show that the group variable need not be a confounder (in the strict epidemiological sense) for ecological bias to occur: effect modification can lead to profound ecological bias, whether or not the group variable or the effect modifier are independent risk factors. Furthermore, an extraneous risk factor need not be associated with the study variable at the individual level in order to produce ecological bias. Thus the conditions for the production of ecological bias by a covariate are much broader than the conditions for the production of individual-level confounding by a covariate. We also show that standardization or ecological control of variables responsible for ecological bias are generally insufficient to remove such bias.