Publications Search - Abstract View
Title: |
Effects of self-reported health conditions and pesticide exposures on probability of follow-up in a prospective cohort study. |
Authors: |
Montgomery MP, Kamel F, Hoppin JA, Beane Freeman LE, Alavanja MC, Sandler DP |
Journal: |
Am J Ind Med |
Date: |
2010 May |
Branches: |
OEEB |
PubMed ID: |
20017198 |
PMC ID: |
PMC3184944 |
Abstract: |
BACKGROUND: We investigated the potential for selection bias due to non-participation in the follow-up of a large prospective cohort study. METHODS: Licensed pesticide applicators (52,395 private; 4,916 commercial) in the Agricultural Health Study provided demographic, health, and pesticide exposure information at enrollment (1993-1997) and in a 5-year follow-up telephone interview. Factors associated with non-participation in the follow-up were identified using multiple logistic regression. Potential for selection bias was evaluated by comparing exposure-disease associations between the entire cohort and the follow-up subset. RESULTS: Sixty-six percent of private and 60% of commercial applicators completed the follow-up interview. Private and commercial applicators who did not complete the follow-up reported at enrollment younger age, less education, lower body mass index, poorer health behaviors but fewer health conditions, and lower pesticide use. Estimates of exposure-disease associations calculated with and without non-participants did not indicate strong selection bias. CONCLUSIONS: Differences between non-participants and participants in the follow-up interview were generally small, and we did not find significant evidence of selection bias. However, the extent of bias may depend on the specific exposure and outcome under study. |