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Citation

Lesko, Catherine R.; Keil, Alexander P.; & Edwards, Jessie K. (2020). The Epidemiologic Toolbox: Identifying, Honing, and Using the Right Tools for the Job. American Journal of Epidemiology, 189(6), 511-517. PMCID: PMC7368131

Abstract

There has been much debate about the relative emphasis of the field of epidemiology on causal inference. We believe this debate does short shrift to the breadth of the field. Epidemiologists answer myriad questions that are not causal and hypothesize about and investigate causal relationships without estimating causal effects. Descriptive studies face significant and often overlooked inferential and interpretational challenges; we briefly articulate some of them and argue that a more detailed treatment of biases that affect single-sample estimation problems would benefit all types of epidemiologic studies. Lumping all questions about causality creates ambiguity about the utility of different conceptual models and causal frameworks; 2 distinct types of causal questions include 1) hypothesis generation and theorization about causal structures and 2) hypothesis-driven causal effect estimation. The potential outcomes framework and causal graph theory help efficiently and reliably guide epidemiologic studies designed to estimate a causal effect to best leverage prior data, avoid cognitive fallacies, minimize biases, and understand heterogeneity in treatment effects. Appropriate matching of theoretical frameworks to research questions can increase the rigor of epidemiologic research and increase the utility of such research to improve public health.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aje/kwaa030

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2020

Journal Title

American Journal of Epidemiology

Author(s)

Lesko, Catherine R.
Keil, Alexander P.
Edwards, Jessie K.

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC7368131

ORCiD

Edwards, J -0000-0002-1741-335X