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ARTICLES DE PERIODIQUES

Subsequent injury definition, classification and consequence

Hamilton, Gavin ; Meeuwisse, Willem H. ; Emery, Carolyn ; Shrier, Ian
Clinical Journal of Sport Medicine vol. 21 n°6, p. 508-514, Novembre 2011


Cote : 617.102 7 H2171s 2011

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ARTICLES DE PERIODIQUES

Past injury as a risk factoe : an illustrative example where appearances are deceiving

Hamilton, Gavin ; Meeuwisse, Willem H. ; Emery, Carolyn ; Steele, Russell J. ; Shrier, Ian
American Journal of Epidemiology vol 173 n° 8, 2011-02-22

Previous injury is believed to be a causal risk factor for subsequent injury. Using empirical data on circus artists (n = 1,281 artists) between 2004 and 2008 in Montreal, Canada, as a motivating example, the authors use patient vector plots to demonstrate that a bias away from the null must always occur in the typical analyses cited as evidence (i.e., survival analysis, Poisson regression), except in the improbable context where all subjects have the same inherent risk independent of previous injury. In addition, using simulated data, the authors demonstrate that a simple method that conditions on the individual will approximate conclusions from more complex analytical methods. By using the typical analysis of the authors’ empirical data, Kaplan-Meier curves and Cox regression suggested increasing injury rates for both the second and third injuries compared with the first injury. However, conditional analyses using a matched population (i.e., time to first, second, and third injuries among artists with 3 or more injuries) showed that injury rates were unchanged for both the second and third injuries compared with the first injury. These results suggest that previous injury should not be evaluated as a causal risk factor unless one conditions on the individual in some way. [editor summary]
Previous injury is believed to be a causal risk factor for subsequent injury. Using empirical data on circus artists (n = 1,281 artists) between 2004 and 2008 in Montreal, Canada, as a motivating example, the authors use patient vector plots to demonstrate that a bias away from the null must always occur in the typical analyses cited as evidence (i.e., survival analysis, Poisson regression), except in the improbable context where all subjects ...

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ARTICLES DE PERIODIQUES

Examining the effect of the injury definition on risk factor analysis in circus artists

Hamilton, Gavin ; Meeuwisse, Willem H. ; Emery, Carolyn ; Shrier, Ian
Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports, vol.22 n°3, p.330-334, 2010

A secondary data analysis of a prospective cohort study was conducted to explore how different definitions of injury affect the results of risk factor analyses. Modern circus artists (n=1281) were followed for 828 547 performances over a period of 49 months (2004–2008). A univariate risk factor analysis (age, sex, nationality, artist role) estimating incidence rate ratios (IRR) with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) was conducted using three injury definitions: (1) medical attention injuries, (2) time-loss injuries resulting in ≥1 missed performances (TL-1) and (3) time-loss injuries resulting in >15 missed performances (TL-15). Results of the risk factor analysis were dependent on the injury definition. Sex (females to male; IRR=1.13, 95% CI; 1.02–1.25) and age over 30 (<20 years to >30 years; IRR=1.37, 95% CI; 1.07–1.79) were risk factors for medical attention injuries only. Risk of injury for Europeans compared with North Americans was higher for TL-1 and TL-15 injuries compared with medical attention injuries. Finally, non-sudden load artists (low-impact acts) were less likely than sudden load artists (high-impact acts) to have TL-1 injuries, but the risk of medical attention injuries was similar. The choice of injury definition can have effects on the magnitude and direction of risk factor analyses.
A secondary data analysis of a prospective cohort study was conducted to explore how different definitions of injury affect the results of risk factor analyses. Modern circus artists (n=1281) were followed for 828 547 performances over a period of 49 months (2004–2008). A univariate risk factor analysis (age, sex, nationality, artist role) estimating incidence rate ratios (IRR) with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) was conducted using three ...


Cote : 617.102 7 H2171s 2012

  • Ex. 1 — Consultation sur place
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