Attrition and generalizability in longitudinal studies: findings from a 15-year population-based study and a Monte Carlo simulation study
Norwegian Institute of Public Health · University of Oslo
Abstract
Attrition is one of the major methodological problems in longitudinal studies. It can deteriorate generalizability of findings if participants who stay in a study differ from those who drop out. The aim of this study was to examine the degree to which attrition leads to biased estimates of means of variables and associations between them.
Mothers of 18-month-old children were enrolled in a population-based study in 1993 (N=913) that aimed to examine development in children and their families in the general population. Fifteen years later, 56% of the sample had dropped out. The present study examined predictors of attrition as well as baseline associations between variables among those who stayed and those who dropped out of that study. A Monte Carlo simulation study was also performed.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 18.69
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 45
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Attrition
- Generalizability theory
- Biostatistics
- Medicine
- Demography
- Longitudinal study
- Population
- Sample size determination