Redundant causation from a sufficient cause perspective
Open Access
- 2 August 2010
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Epidemiologic Perspectives & Innovations
- Vol. 7 (1) , 5
- https://doi.org/10.1186/1742-5573-7-5
Abstract
Sufficient causes of disease are redundant when an individual acquires the components of two or more sufficient causes. In this circumstance, the individual still would have become diseased even if one of the sufficient causes had not been acquired. In the context of a study, when any individuals acquire components of more than one sufficient cause over the observation period, the etiologic effect of the exposure (defined as the absolute or relative difference between the proportion of the exposed who develop the disease by the end of the study period and the proportion of those individuals who would have developed the disease at the moment they did even in the absence of the exposure) may be underestimated. Even in the absence of confounding and bias, the observed effect estimate represents only a subset of the etiologic effect. This underestimation occurs regardless of the measure of effect used.To some extent, redundancy of sufficient causes is always present, and under some circumstances, it may make a true cause of disease appear to be not causal. This problem is particularly relevant when the researcher's goal is to characterize the universe of sufficient causes of the disease, identify risk factors for targeted interventions, or construct causal diagrams. In this paper, we use the sufficient component cause model and the disease response type framework to show how redundant causation arises and the factors that determine the extent of its impact on epidemiologic effect measures.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- A sufficient cause based approach to the assessment of mediationEuropean Journal of Epidemiology, 2008
- A further critique of the analytic strategy of adjusting for covariates to identify biologic mediationEpidemiologic Perspectives & Innovations, 2004
- Estimating causal effectsInternational Journal of Epidemiology, 2002
- Relation of probability of causation to relative risk and doubling dose: a methodologic error that has become a social problem.American Journal of Public Health, 1999
- Identifiability and Exchangeability for Direct and Indirect EffectsEpidemiology, 1992
- Estimability and estimation of excess and etiologic fractionsStatistics in Medicine, 1989
- Invariants and noninvariants in the concept of interdependent effects.Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health, 1988
- Identifiability, Exchangeability, and Epidemiological ConfoundingInternational Journal of Epidemiology, 1986
- Causal and preventive interdependence. Elementary principles.Scandinavian Journal of Work, Environment & Health, 1982
- CausationThe Journal of Philosophy, 1973