Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
QUANTITATIVE RESEARCH METHODOLOGIES: A SAMPLER Ophelia M. Mendoza, DrPH
Lecture delivered during the 5th Health R&D Expo Grand Regal Hotel, Davao City, 31 July 2015
2
OBJECTIVE OF THE PRESENTATION
For the audience to: be exposed; appreciate; become curious; be interested; and be motivated to learn more about quantitative methods in epidemiologic and health research
3
OUTLINE OF PRESENTATION
1. Difference between quantitative and qualitative studies 2. Quantitative study designs 2.1 Descriptive studies 2.2 Analytic studies 3. Considerations in interpreting findings of epidemiologic studies 3.1 Bias 3.2 Confounding 3.3 Role of chance
4
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE STUDIES
5
DIFFERENCE BETWEEN QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE STUDIES (CON’T)
6
TWO MAJOR AREAS COVERED UNDER RESEARCH METHODOLOGIES
Study designs Data analysis
7
DESCRIPTIVE versus ANALYTIC STUDY DESIGNS
8
TYPES OF DESCRIPTIVE STUDY DESIGNS
Case studies or case series Descriptive cross-sectional studies/prevalence surveys Ecologic descriptive studies
9
DESCRIPTIVE CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDIES/ PREVALENCE SURVEYS
Involves the collection of data on the occurrence and distribution of the disease of interest in populations To characterize the disease, the prevalence is usually computed for specific categories of variables related to: person (sex; age; occupation, etc.) place (geographic subdivisions; type of terrain, etc) time (month; season, etc.) Also used in health systems research to describe prevalence according to patterns of health service utilization and compliance. KAP surveys may also be categorized under this category
10
ECOLOGIC STUDIES unit of observation and unit of analysis is an aggregate rather than individual persons most practical design to use when exposure level is relatively homogeneous in a population but differs between populations (ex., water quality) or when individual measurements of exposure are impossible (ex., air pollution) they are used to generate hypothesis, or as a quick method of examining associations Its most serious flaw is the risk of ecological fallacy -- i.e., the characteristics of the geographical unit are incorrectly attributed to individuals
11
TYPES OF ANALYTIC STUDY DESIGNS
Cohort studies observational Case-control studies studies Cross-sectional studies Experimental studies and clinical trials
12
CORE ELEMENTS OF OBSERVATIONAL STUDIES
DISEASE STATUS EXPOSURE STATUS Exposed Unexposed With the disease Without the disease
13
COHORT STUDY SAMPLING POPULATION SAMPLES TO BE SELECTED
AT START OF STUDY DATA TO BE COLLECTED IN THE STUDY* Population without the disease Exposed individuals Number with the disease Number without the disease Unexposed individuals *Data will be collected after a follow-up period, the length of which varies according to the nature of the disease being studied
14
COHORT STUDY EXAMPLE: HYPERTENSION AND PHYSICAL ACTIVITY LEVEL
SAMPLING POPULATION SAMPLES TO BE SELECTED AT START OF STUDY DATA TO BE COLLECTED IN THE STUDY Population without Hypertension Individuals with active lifestyle Number with hypertension Number without hypertension Individuals with sedentary lifestyle
15
TWO TYPES OF COHORT STUDIES: PROSPECTIVE AND RETROSPECTIVE COHORT
TYPE OF COHORT STUDY EXPOSURE OUTCOME Prospective Assessed at start of study Followed-up into the future Retrospective Assessed at some point in the past for which records are available Design is also used when there is simultaneous exposure to a factor (ex., natural and man-made disasters) Outcome has already occurred
16
CASE CONTROL STUDY SAMPLING POPULATION SAMPLES TO BE SELECTED
AT START OF STUDY DATA TO BE COLLECTED IN THE STUDY* Population with the disease (cases) Population without the disease (controls) Number of exposed individuals Number of unexposed individuals * Exposure data will be collected retrospectively through personal interviews and/or records review
17
CASE CONTROL STUDY EXAMPLE: HYPERTENSION AND PHYSICAL ACTIVITY LEVEL
SAMPLING POPULATION SAMPLES TO BE SELECTED AT START OF STUDY DATA TO BE COLLECTED IN THE STUDY Population with hypertension (cases) Population without hypertension (controls) Individuals with hypertension Number with active lifestyle Number with sedentary lifestyle Individuals without hypertension
18
CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY
SAMPLING POPULATION SAMPLES TO BE SELECTED AT START OF STUDY DATA TO BE COLLECTED IN THE STUDY* Population with both disease and exposure status unknown at start of study Sample of individuals from the target population with both disease and exposure status unknown at start of study Number of exposed individuals with the disease Number of exposed individuals without the disease
19
CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY EXAMPLE: HYPERTENSION AND PHYSICAL ACTIVITY LEVEL
SAMPLING POPULATION SAMPLES TO BE SELECTED AT START OF STUDY DATA TO BE COLLECTED IN THE STUDY Population whose physical activity levels and status with respect to hypertension are unknown at start of study Sample of individuals from the target population whose physical activity levels and status with respect to hypertension are unknown at start of study Number of hypertensive individuals with sedentary lifestyle Number of normotensive individuals with sedentary lifestyle Number of hypertensive individuals with active lifestyle Number of normotensive individuals with active lifestyle
20
COMPARISON OF ANALYTIC DESIGNS ACCORDING TO SELECTED ATTRIBUTES
COHORT CASE-CONTROL CROSS-SECTIONAL Sampling population Population without the disease Population with the disease (cases) Population without the disease (controls) Population with both disease and exposure status unknown at start of study Temporal sequence Prospective (for prospective cohort) Retrospective (for Retrospective cohort) Retrospective Current and/or retrospective Use Compares incidence rates in exposed and unexposed Compares prevalence of exposure among cases and controls Describes association between exposure and disease Measure of disease frequency Incidence of disease among exposed and unexposed groups Cannot be computed Prevalence of disease among exposed and exposed Measure of association between disease and exposure Relative risk Attributable risk Odds ratio (estimate of relative risk) Prevalence ratio (inexact estimate of relative risk) Odds ratio
21
EXPERIMENTS they provide the best evidence for testing any hypothesis or to investigate possible cause-effect relationships they resemble cohort studies in that they require follow-up of subjects to determine outcome its essential distinguishing feature is that it involves action, manipulation or intervention on the part of the investigator
22
MAIN CHARACTERISTICS OF AN EXPERIMENT
Pre and post-treatment measurements made Presence of a control group Random selection of subjects from a reference population Random assignment of subjects and treatments to groups High degree of control over extraneous variables
23
BASIC SET-UP OF AN EXPERIMENT
24
WHY ARE PRE AND POST-TREATMENT MEASUREMENTS NEEDED?
To enable the measurement of change resulting from the treatment Change is often used as indicator of effectiveness WHY IS A CONTROL GROUP NEEDED? To determine whether or not change occurs even in the absence of the treatment or intervention
25
PERCENTAGE OF MOTHERS BREASFEEDING THEIR BABIES BEFORE AND AFTER A HEALTH EDUCATION PROGRAM: MUNICIPALITIES A, B AND C Effective Effective Effective
26
PERCENTAGE OF MOTHERS BREASFEEDING THEIR BABIES BEFORE AND AFTER A HEALTH EDUCATION PROGRAM: MUNICIPALITIES A, B AND C Not effective Effective Not effective
27
PRE-CLINICAL STUDIES Experiments done prior to testing drugs in humans for purposes of: Isolating and characterizing active compounds Testing of absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion and toxicological properties (ADME/Tox) Pharmacology and toxicology in animals Establishing no observable adverse effect levels to determine dosage to be used for initial Phase 1 clinical trial of the drug
28
CLINICAL TRIALS Experimental designs used by clinicians and epidemiologists to evaluate drugs, medical devices and clinical or health care procedures The most common form of a clinical trial is the randomized, controlled, double blind clinical trial
29
PHASES OF CLINICAL TRIALS
Perform initial human testing in a small group of healthy volunteers (about ) Major goal is to determine if drug is safe in humans PHASE 2 Test in a small group of patients (about 100 – 500) Objective is to determine possible short-term side effects and risks associated with the drug; if it works according to expected mechanism PHASE 3 Test in a large group of patients (about ) to show safety and efficacy PHASE 4 Post-marketing surveillance of drug to determine long-term safety and reassess effectiveness, acceptability and continued use under normal field settings
30
1. Bias Confounding Role of chance
Major considerations in interpreting findings from epidemiologic studies 1. Bias Confounding Role of chance
31
BIAS leads to an incorrect estimate of the effect of an exposure on the outcome of interest Two main types of bias: Selection bias – distortion of the estimate of effect resulting from the manner of subject selection (ex., admission bias in hospital-based studies; selective survival; on-response) Information bias – distortion in the estimated of effect due to measurement error or misclassification of subjects in one or more variables Bias is generally addressed during the design phase of the study
32
CONFOUNDING Occurs when an estimate of the association between an exposure and an outcome is mixed-up with the real effect of another exposure on the same outcome, with the 2 exposure variables being correlated to each other Confounding can be addressed either at the: Design phase (randomization; restriction; matching) Data analysis phase (stratification; statistical modeling)
33
STEPS IN DEALING WITH CONFOUNDING IN DATA ANALYSIS
Produce simple tables to check the consistency of the data Calculate crude measures of effect Stratify by levels of the potential confounding variable Compute stratum-specific effect estimates Check uniformity of the stratum-specific estimates If uniform across strata, compute for the pooled adjusted summary estimate of the effect using Mantel-Haenzel method If effect is not uniform (i.e., interaction is present) use/report stratum-specific estimates Use regression modeling techniques to adjust simultaneously for several confounders
34
PRODUCE SIMPLE TABLE AND CALCULATE CRUDE MEASURE OF EFFECT
Relationship between myocardial infarction (MI) and recent use of oral contraceptives (OC) Use of OC w/ MI w/o MI Yes 29 135 No 205 1607 TOTAL 234 1742 Source: Shapiro, et al 1979 Crude OR= ×2 = P=.006
35
Use of OC Myocardial [E] Infarction [D] Age [F]
CONSIDER THE ROLE OF A 3RD VARIABLE, AGE, WHICH IS A POTENTIAL CONFOUNDER (F) Use of OC Myocardial [E] Infarction [D] Age [F]
36
STRATIFY BY LEVELS OF POTENTIAL CONFOUNDING VARIABLE (AGE)
37
COMPUTE STRATUM-SPECIFIC EFFECT ESTIMATES
38
STEPS IN DEALING WITH CONFOUNDING IN DATA ANALYSIS
Produce simple tables to check the consistency of the data Calculate crude measures of effect Stratify by levels of the potential confounding variable Compute stratum-specific effect estimates Check uniformity of the stratum-specific estimates If uniform across strata, compute for the pooled adjusted summary estimate of the effect using Mantel-Haenzel method If effect is not uniform (i.e., interaction is present) use/report stratum-specific estimates Use regression modeling techniques to adjust simultaneously for several confounders
39
COMPUTE FOR POOLED ADJUSTED SUMMARY ESTIMATE OF EFFECT
Mantel-Haenzel age-adjusted OR = 3.97
40
WHY DID AGE BECOME A CONFOUNDING VARIABLE?
Distribution of Cases (with MI) and Controls (without MI) According to Age AGE WITH MI WITHOUT MI No. % 25-29 6 2.6 286 16.4 30-34 21 9.0 423 24.3 35-39 37 15.8 356 20.4 39-44 71 30.3 371 21.3 45-49 99 42.3 306 17.6 TOTAL 234 100.0 1742
41
CONFOUNDING VS INTERACTION
Situation Crude OR Stratum 1 Stratum 2 Adjusted Analysis Situation 1 2.0 No confounding; No interaction Situation 2 3.0 W/ confounding; No interactiom Situation 3 4.0 0.6 - Strong interactiom
42
STEPS IN DEALING WITH CONFOUNDING IN DATA ANALYSIS
Produce simple tables to check the consistency of the data Calculate crude measures of effect Stratify by levels of the potential confounding variable Compute stratum-specific effect estimates Check uniformity of the stratum-specific estimates If uniform across strata, compute for the pooled adjusted summary estimate of the effect using Mantel-Haenzel method If effect is not uniform (i.e., interaction is present) use/report stratum-specific estimates Use regression modeling techniques to adjust simultaneously for several confounders
43
SELECTING VARIABLES IN MULTIPLE REGRESSION ANALYSIS
There is no single best answer on how it should be done Usually based on combination of theoretical, clinical, practical and statistical considerations One should always start with the conceptual framework of the study Variables in first model considered generally based on: Clinical/biological theory Results of previous studies Variables included in succeeding models determined statistically based on elimination/inclusion procedure of choice (ex., backward; forward; stepwise procedures)
44
COMMONLY USED REGRESSION MODELS IN EPIDEMIOLOGY
Logistic regression Used for estimating odds ratios from unmatched case-control studies and cross-sectional studies Conditional logistic regression analysis Applicable for individually matched case-control studies Poisson regression Used in estimating rate-ratios using person-time data Cox’s proportional hazards model Used when the dependent variable is time=to=an-event (ex., in survival analysis)
45
REMINDERS It is good practice to use the simple classical methods based on stratification in the initial phase of the analysis. The cross-tabulations used in stratification keep the investigator in touch with the data Regression models can be used only in the second stage of the analysis to adjust simultaneously for several confounders
46
ROLE OF CHANCE Accounts for sampling error and hence issue is relevant only when study subjects are selected through random sampling procedures using probability sampling designs Involves statistical significance testing and computation of interval estimates for measures of effect/outcome
47
THE LAST WORD Quantitative research methodologies are merely tools which we use to generate more informative, valid and reliable evidence for decision-making. They are merely the means to an end The final challenge is still the researcher’s ability to interpret the results of the application of all these quantitative techniques in the context of the objectives of the study
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.