Journal ArticleOpen Access
Sampling strategies to measure the prevalence of common recurrent infections in longitudinal studies
Authors
Author Affiliations
London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Universidade Federal da Bahia, Instituto de Saúde, International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research
Published InEmerging Themes in Epidemiology
Year2010
Citations22
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Measuring recurrent infections such as diarrhoea or respiratory infections in epidemiological studies is a methodological challenge. Problems in measuring the incidence of recurrent infections include the episode definition, recall error, and the logistics of close follow up. Longitudinal prevalence (LP), the proportion-of-time-ill estimated by repeated prevalence measurements, is an alternative measure to incidence of recurrent infections. In contrast to incidence which usually requires continuous sampling, LP can be measured at intervals. This study explored how many more participants are needed for infrequent sampling to achieve the same study power as frequent sampling. METHODS: We developed a set of four empirical simulation models representing low and high risk settings with short or long episode durations. The model was used to…
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