Geostatistical survival models for environmental risk assessment with large retrospective cohorts

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Abstract

Motivated by the problem of cancer risk assessment near a nuclear power generating station, the paper describes a methodology for fitting a spatially correlated survival model to large retrospective cohort data sets. Retrospective cohorts, which can be assembled inexpensively from population-based health databases, can partially account for lags between exposures and outcome of chronic diseases such as cancer. These data sets overcome one of the principal limitations of cross-sectional spatial analyses, though performing statistical inference requires accommodating censored and truncated event times as well as spatial dependence. The use of spatial survival models for large retrospective cohorts is described, and Bayesian inference using Markov random-field approximations and integrated nested Laplace approximations is presented. The method is applied to data from individuals living near Pickering Nuclear Generating Station in Canada, showing that the effect of ambient radiation on cancer is not statistically significant. © 2013 Royal Statistical Society.

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APA

Jiang, H., Brown, P. E., Rue, H., & Shimakura, S. (2014). Geostatistical survival models for environmental risk assessment with large retrospective cohorts. Journal of the Royal Statistical Society. Series A: Statistics in Society, 177(3), 679–695. https://doi.org/10.1111/rssa.12041

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