Analysis of interrupted time series mortality trends: an example to evaluate regionalized perinatal care.
- 1 January 1981
- journal article
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 71 (1) , 38-46
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.71.1.38
Abstract
Interrupted time series designs are frequently employed to evaluate program impact. Analysis strategies to determine if shifts have occurred are not well known. The case where statistical fluctuations (errors) may be assumed independent is considered, and a segmented regression methodology presented. The method discussed ia applied to the assessment of changes in local and state perinatal postneonatal mortality to identify historical trends and will be used to evaluate the impact of the North Carolina Regionalized Perinatal Care Program when seven years of post-program mortality data become available. The perinatal program region is contrasted with a control region to provide a basis for interpretation of differences noted. Relevant segmented regression models provided good fits to the data and highlighted mortality trends over the last 30 years. Considerable racial differences in these trends were identified, particularly for postneonatal mortality. Segmented regression is considered relevant for the analysis of interrupted time series designs in other applications when errors can be taken to be independent. Thus, the methodology may be regarded as a general statistical tool for evaluation purposes.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- The underregistration of neonatal deaths: Georgia 1974--77.American Journal of Public Health, 1980
- Racial differences between linked birth and infant death records in Washington State.American Journal of Public Health, 1980
- The quality and completeness of birthweight and gestational age data in computerized birth files.American Journal of Public Health, 1980
- Fitting Segmented Polynomial Regression Models Whose Join Points Have to Be EstimatedJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1973
- The Connecticut Crackdown on SpeedingLaw & Society Review, 1968
- Analysis of Data on the Connecticut Speeding Crackdown as a Time-Series Quasi-ExperimentLaw & Society Review, 1968
- Fitting Segmented Curves Whose Join Points Have to be EstimatedJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1966
- Fitting Segmented Curves Whose Join Points Have to Be EstimatedJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1966
- Application of discriminant functions in perinatal death and survivalAmerican Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1966
- A change in level of a non-stationary time seriesBiometrika, 1965