An innovative application of Bayesian disease mapping methods to patient safety research: a Canadian adverse medical event study
- 23 February 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Statistics in Medicine
- Vol. 25 (23) , 3960-3980
- https://doi.org/10.1002/sim.2507
Abstract
Recently developed disease mapping and ecological regression methods have become important techniques in studies of disease epidemiology and in health services research. This increase in importance is partially a result of the development of Bayesian statistical methodologies that make it possible to study associations between health problems and risk factors at an aggregate (i.e. areal) level while taking into account such matters as unmeasured confounding and spatial relationships. In this paper we present a demonstration of the joint use of empirical Bayes (EB) and full Bayesian inferential techniques in a small area study of adverse medical events (also known as ‘iatrogenic injury’) in British Columbia, Canada. In particular, we illustrate a unified Bayesian hierarchical spatial modelling framework that enables simultaneous examinations of potential associations between adverse medical event occurrence and regional characteristics, age effects, residual variation and spatial autocorrelation. We propose an analytic strategy for complementary use of EB and FB inferential techniques for risk assessment and model selection, presenting an EB–FB combined approach that draws on the strengths of each method while minimizing inherent weaknesses. The work was motivated by the need to explore relatively efficient ways to analyse regional variations of health services outcomes and resource utilization when a considerable amount of statistical modelling and inference are required. Copyright © 2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Comparison of three methods for estimating rates of adverse events and rates of preventable adverse events in acute care hospitalsBMJ, 2004
- Administrative data based patient safety research: a critical reviewQuality and Safety in Health Care, 2003
- Effects of the characteristics of neighbourhoods and the characteristics of people on cause specific mortality: a register based follow up study of 252 000 menJournal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 2003
- Bayesian Measures of Model Complexity and FitJournal of the Royal Statistical Society Series B: Statistical Methodology, 2002
- Approximate Inference in Generalized Linear Mixed ModelsJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1993
- Inference from Iterative Simulation Using Multiple SequencesStatistical Science, 1992
- Empirical bayes versus fully bayesian analysis of geographical variation in disease riskStatistics in Medicine, 1992
- Adverse events, negligence in hospitalized patients: Results from the Harvard Medical Practice StudyPerspectives in Healthcare Risk Management, 1991
- Empirical Bayes Procedures for Stabilizing Maps of U.S. Cancer Mortality RatesJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1989