Self‐selection and bias in a large prospective pregnancy cohort in Norway
Primary HealthCare · Primary Health Care · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Self-selection in epidemiological studies may introduce selection bias and influence the validity of study results. To evaluate potential bias due to self-selection in a large prospective pregnancy cohort in Norway, the authors studied differences in prevalence estimates and association measures between study participants and all women giving birth in Norway. Women who agreed to participate in the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study (43.5% of invited; n = 73 579) were compared with all women giving birth in Norway (n = 398 849) using data from the population-based Medical Birth Registry of Norway in 2000-2006. Bias in the prevalence of 23 exposure and outcome variables was measured as the ratio of relative…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 33.77
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 26
Authors
10- RMRoy M. NilsenCorresponding
Primary HealthCare, Primary Health Care, University of Bergen
- SEStein Emil Vollset
Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Primary HealthCare, Primary Health Care, University of Bergen
- HKHåkon K. Gjessing
Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Primary HealthCare, Primary Health Care, University of Bergen
- RSRolv Skjærven
Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Primary HealthCare, Primary Health Care, University of Bergen
- KKKari Klungsøyr
Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Primary HealthCare, Primary Health Care, University of Bergen
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Relative risk
- Demography
- Prospective cohort study
- Population
- Cohort
- Cohort study
- Pregnancy
- Good health and well-being