Murphy Joe, Brackbill Robert M, Thalji Lisa, Dolan Melissa, Pulliam Paul, Walker Deborah J
RTI International, 230 W. Monroe, Suite 2100, Chicago, IL 60606, USA.
Stat Med. 2007 Apr 15;26(8):1688-701. doi: 10.1002/sim.2806.
The World Trade Center Health Registry (WTCHR) is a database for following people who were exposed to the disaster of 11 September 2001. Hundreds of thousands of people were exposed to the immense cloud of dust and debris, the indoor dust, the fumes from persistent fires, and the mental trauma of the terrorist attacks on the WTC on 9/11. The purpose of the WTCHR is to evaluate the potential short- and long-term physical and mental health effects of the disaster. The definitions of the exposed groups are broad and defined based on an understanding of which groups had the highest exposures to the WTC disaster and its aftermath. The four exposure groups include rescue and recovery workers, residents, students and school staff, and building occupants and passersby in Lower Manhattan. While one goal of the WTCHR was to maximize coverage overall and for each exposure group, another was to ensure equal representation within exposure groups. Because of the multiple sample types pursued, several approaches were required to determine eligibility. Estimates of the number of eligible persons in each of the exposed populations were based on the best available information including Census, entity-specific employment figures, and public and private school enrollment data, among other publicly available sources. To address issues of undercoverage and overcoverage a variety of methods were assessed or applied, including a capture-recapture analyses test of overlapping sample building list sources and automated deduplication of sample records. Estimates of the true eligible population indicate that over 400,000 unique individuals were eligible for the baseline health survey. Interviewer-administered surveys were completed with more than 71,000 persons, resulting in an overall enrollment rate of approximately 17 per cent. Coverage was highest among rescue and recovery workers, followed by residents, students and school staff, and building occupants. Both the accuracy of coverage estimates and the raw number and representativeness of enrollees were maximized by our approach to coverage. In designing a registry which relies on multiple pathways and sources of data to build the sample, it is important to develop a comprehensive approach that considers all sources of error and minimizes bias that may be introduced through the methodology.
世界贸易中心健康登记处(WTCHR)是一个用于跟踪2001年9月11日灾难事件受害者的数据库。成千上万的人暴露于大量的灰尘和碎片、室内灰尘、持续火灾产生的烟雾以及世贸中心9·11恐怖袭击造成的精神创伤之中。WTCHR的目的是评估这场灾难可能对身心健康产生的短期和长期影响。暴露群体的定义很宽泛,是基于对哪些群体在世贸中心灾难及其后果中暴露程度最高的理解而确定的。四个暴露群体包括救援和恢复工作人员、居民、学生和学校工作人员,以及曼哈顿下城的建筑物居住者和路人。虽然WTCHR的一个目标是总体上以及每个暴露群体都实现最大程度的覆盖,但另一个目标是确保暴露群体内部的代表性平等。由于要获取多种样本类型,因此需要采用几种方法来确定资格。每个暴露人群中符合条件人数的估计是基于包括人口普查、特定实体的就业数据以及公立和私立学校入学数据等最佳可用信息以及其他公开可用来源。为了解决覆盖不足和覆盖过度的问题,评估或应用了多种方法,包括对重叠样本建筑物清单来源进行捕获-再捕获分析测试以及对样本记录进行自动重复数据删除。对真正符合条件人群的估计表明,超过40万不同个体有资格参加基线健康调查。由访谈员进行的调查已完成了71000多人,总体参与率约为17%。救援和恢复工作人员中的覆盖率最高,其次是居民、学生和学校工作人员以及建筑物居住者。我们的覆盖方法使覆盖估计的准确性以及登记者的原始数量和代表性都达到了最大化。在设计一个依赖多种途径和数据来源来构建样本的登记处时,制定一种综合方法很重要,这种方法要考虑到所有误差来源,并尽量减少可能通过该方法引入的偏差。