Mackenzie S G, Lippman A
Department of Community Health, Lakeshore General Hospital, Pointe Claire, Quebec, Canada.
Am J Epidemiol. 1989 Jan;129(1):65-75. doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a115125.
The role of report (recall) bias in case-control studies of possible reproductive hazards was investigated in a study of women who gave birth at the Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal from September 1983 to May 1985. Women were questioned twice (early in pregnancy; after delivery) about exposures that might influence pregnancy outcome. The two sets of responses of case mothers, control mothers, and mothers of infants of intermediate health status were then compared. Similar inconsistencies in the reporting of 39 exposure variables were common in all three groups, with postdelivery deletion of previous reports more frequent than addition of new information. Changes in reporting were not associated with pregnancy outcome, maternal concern about the baby or maternal sociodemographic characteristics. Odds ratios of exposure estimated from the two sets of data did not differ importantly. Moreover, there was no postdelivery trend to increases, or decreases, in the estimates of the odds ratios. The data do not provide evidence of biased reporting of exposures.
在一项针对1983年9月至1985年5月间于蒙特利尔皇家维多利亚医院分娩的女性的研究中,调查了报告(回忆)偏倚在可能的生殖危害病例对照研究中的作用。研究人员在孕期早期和分娩后分别对这些女性进行询问,了解可能影响妊娠结局的暴露情况。随后比较了病例母亲、对照母亲以及健康状况中等的婴儿的母亲这三组人群的两组回答。在所有三组中,39个暴露变量的报告中出现类似不一致情况很常见,分娩后删除先前报告的情况比添加新信息更为频繁。报告的变化与妊娠结局、母亲对婴儿的关注程度或母亲的社会人口学特征无关。根据两组数据估算的暴露比值比没有显著差异。此外,分娩后估算的比值比没有上升或下降的趋势。这些数据没有提供暴露报告存在偏倚的证据。