Journal article
Consistency and precision of cancer reporting in a multiwave national panel survey
Population health metrics, Vol.8(1), pp.20-20
06/25/2010
DOI: 10.1186/1478-7954-8-20
PMCID: PMC2905337
PMID: 20579346
Abstract
Many epidemiological studies rely on self-reported information, the accuracy of which is critical for unbiased estimates of population health. Previously, accuracy has been analyzed by comparing self-reports to other sources, such as cancer registries. Cancer is believed to be a well-reported condition. This paper uses novel panel data to test the consistency of cancer reports for respondents with repeated self-reports.
Data come from 978 adults who reported having been diagnosed with cancer in at least one of four waves of the Panel Study of Income Dynamics, 1999-2005. Consistency of cancer occurrence reports and precision of timing of onset were studied as a function of individual and cancer-related characteristics using logistic and ordered logistic models.
Almost 30% of respondents gave inconsistent cancer reports, meaning they said they never had cancer after having said they did have cancer in a previous interview; 50% reported the year of diagnosis with a discrepancy of two or more years. More recent cancers were reported with a higher consistency and timing precision; cervical cancer was reported more inaccurately than other cancer types. Demographic and socio-economic factors were only weak predictors of reporting quality.
Results suggest that retrospective reports of cancer contain significant measurement error. The errors, however, are fairly random across different social groups, meaning that the results based on the data are not systematically biased by socio-economic factors. Even for health events as salient as cancer, researchers should exercise caution about the presumed accuracy of self-reports, especially if the timing of diagnosis is an important covariate.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Consistency and precision of cancer reporting in a multiwave national panel survey
- Creators
- Anna Zajacova - University of WyomingJennifer Beam Dowd - City University of New YorkRobert F Schoeni - University of MichiganRobert B Wallace - University of Iowa
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Population health metrics, Vol.8(1), pp.20-20
- DOI
- 10.1186/1478-7954-8-20
- PMID
- 20579346
- PMCID
- PMC2905337
- NLM abbreviation
- Popul Health Metr
- ISSN
- 1478-7954
- eISSN
- 1478-7954
- Grant note
- R03 CA149072-01 / NCI NIH HHS T32 AG000221 / NIA NIH HHS R01 AG040213 / NIA NIH HHS R03 CA149072 / NCI NIH HHS R24 HD041028 / NICHD NIH HHS P01 AG029409 / NIA NIH HHS
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 06/25/2010
- Academic Unit
- Epidemiology; Injury Prevention Research Center; Internal Medicine
- Record Identifier
- 9984364433102771
Metrics
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