SOURCES OF BIAS IN RETROSPECTIVE COHORT MORTALITY STUDIES - A NOTE ON TREATMENT OF SUBJECTS LOST TO FOLLOW-UP

  • 1 March 1987
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 29  (3) , 256-261
Abstract
The three important sources of bias in retrospective cohort mortality studies are: (1) the healthy worker confounding bias, (2) the lost to follow-up bias, and (3) bias due to methods of follow-up that result in underascertainment of deaths. This paper presents how the treatment of the lost to follow-up impacts ultimately on the apparent forces of mortality in a cohort. The findings are discussed in the context of the other sources of bias. The treatment of subjects lost to follow-up as lost at the time of loss offers the best estimate of expected mortality and should be the preferred approach.