Applying the Bradford Hill criteria in the 21st century: how data integration has changed causal inference in molecular epidemiology
Colorado State University · Soka University of America · +1 more institution
Abstract
In 1965, Sir Austin Bradford Hill published nine "viewpoints" to help determine if observed epidemiologic associations are causal. Since then, the "Bradford Hill Criteria" have become the most frequently cited framework for causal inference in epidemiologic studies. However, when Hill published his causal guidelines-just 12 years after the double-helix model for DNA was first suggested and 25 years before the Human Genome Project began-disease causation was understood on a more elementary level than it is today. Advancements in genetics, molecular biology, toxicology, exposure science, and statistics have increased our analytical capabilities for exploring potential cause-and-effect relationships, and have…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 12.94
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 63
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Causal inference
- Causation
- Biostatistics
- Inference
- Viewpoints
- Causality (physics)
- Epidemiology
- Data science
- Good health and well-being