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期刊名:Epidemiology

缩写:EPIDEMIOLOGY

ISSN:1044-3983

e-ISSN:1531-5487

IF/分区:4.4/Q1

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共收录本刊相关文章索引2893
Clinical Trial Case Reports Meta-Analysis RCT Review Systematic Review
Classical Article Case Reports Clinical Study Clinical Trial Clinical Trial Protocol Comment Comparative Study Editorial Guideline Letter Meta-Analysis Multicenter Study Observational Study Randomized Controlled Trial Review Systematic Review
Asma M Ahmed,Allison Musty,Joseph Rigdon et al. Asma M Ahmed et al.
Background: Some studies examining associations between maternal injuries and preterm birth reported null or counterintuitive protective effects, especially for 3rd-trimester injuries, likely due to time-related biases. ...
Bronner P Gonçalves,Etsuji Suzuki Bronner P Gonçalves
Epidemiologic analyses that aim to quantify exposure effects on disease progression are not uncommon. Understanding the implications of these studies, however, is complicated, in part because different causal estimands could, at least in th...
Irina Bergenfeld,Robin A Richardson,Alexandria R Hadd et al. Irina Bergenfeld et al.
Background: Intimate partner violence (IPV) is an important global health issue for which measurement error limits public health action. Although most national IPV prevalence estimates come from general health surveys lik...
Catherine Psaras,Onyebuchi A Arah,Kara W Chew et al. Catherine Psaras et al.
Background: Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is a public health concern, with people living with opioid use disorder having a higher risk of infection. Despite the cooccurrence of HCV and opioid use disorder, little is k...
Paula D Strassle,Samantha D Minc,Corey A Kalbaugh et al. Paula D Strassle et al.
Background: Major lower limb amputation is a devastating but preventable complication of peripheral artery disease. It is unclear whether racial and ethnic and rural differences in amputation rates are due to clinical, ho...
Bronner P Gonçalves,Piero L Olliaro,Peter Horby et al. Bronner P Gonçalves et al.
Here, we posit that studies comparing outcomes of patients hospitalized with COVID-19 by vaccination status are important descriptive epidemiologic studies, but contrast two groups that are not comparable with regard to causal analyses. We ...