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Spatial measurement errors in the field of spatial epidemiology

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2016

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BioMed Central
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Zhang, Zhijie, Justin Manjourides, Ted Cohen, Yi Hu, and Qingwu Jiang. 2016. “Spatial measurement errors in the field of spatial epidemiology.” International Journal of Health Geographics 15 (1): 21. doi:10.1186/s12942-016-0049-5. http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12942-016-0049-5.

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Abstract

Background: Spatial epidemiology has been aided by advances in geographic information systems, remote sensing, global positioning systems and the development of new statistical methodologies specifically designed for such data. Given the growing popularity of these studies, we sought to review and analyze the types of spatial measurement errors commonly encountered during spatial epidemiological analysis of spatial data. Methods: Google Scholar, Medline, and Scopus databases were searched using a broad set of terms for papers indexed by a term indicating location (space or geography or location or position) and measurement error (measurement error or measurement inaccuracy or misclassification or uncertainty): we reviewed all papers appearing before December 20, 2014. These papers and their citations were reviewed to identify the relevance to our review. Results: We were able to define and classify spatial measurement errors into four groups: (1) pure spatial location measurement errors, including both non-instrumental errors (multiple addresses, geocoding errors, outcome aggregations, and covariate aggregation) and instrumental errors; (2) location-based outcome measurement error (purely outcome measurement errors and missing outcome measurements); (3) location-based covariate measurement errors (address proxies); and (4) Covariate-Outcome spatial misaligned measurement errors. We propose how these four classes of errors can be unified within an integrated theoretical model and possible solutions were discussed. Conclusion: Spatial measurement errors are ubiquitous threat to the validity of spatial epidemiological studies. We propose a systematic framework for understanding the various mechanisms which generate spatial measurement errors and present practical examples of such errors.

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Spatial epidemiology, Environmental epidemiology, GIS, Geographical epidemiology, Measurement error, Misclassification

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