Record Display for the EPA National Library Catalog

RECORD NUMBER: 1 OF 6

Main Title Assessment of Spatial Variation of Risks in Small Populations.
Author Riggan, W. B. ; Manton, K. G. ; Creason, J. P. ; Woodbury, M. A. ; Stallard, E. ;
CORP Author Health Effects Research Lab., Research Triangle Park, NC. ;Duke Univ., Durham, NC. Center for Demographic Studies.
Publisher c1991
Year Published 1991
Report Number EPA/600/J-92/184;
Stock Number PB92-188903
Additional Subjects Epidemiology ; Populations ; Environmental health ; Risk ; Decision making ; Random allocation ; Morbidity ; Mortality ; Cohort studies ; Bladder neoplasms ; Stomach neoplasms ; Pulmonary neoplasms ; Reprints ;
Holdings
Library Call Number Additional Info Location Last
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Status
NTIS  PB92-188903 Some EPA libraries have a fiche copy filed under the call number shown. 07/26/2022
Collation 18p
Abstract
Often environmental hazards are assessed by examining the spatial variation of disease-specific mortality or morbidity rates. These rates, when estimated for small local populations, can have a high degree of random variation or uncertainty associated with them. If those rate estimates are used to prioritize environmental clean-up actions or to allocate resources, then those decisions may be influenced by this high degree of uncertainty. Unfortunately, the effect of this uncertainty is not to add random noise into the decision-making process, but to systematically bias action toward the smallest populations where uncertainty is greatest and where extreme high and low rate deviations are most likely to be manifest by chance. The authors present a statistical procedure for adjusting rate estimates for differences in variability due to differentials in local area population sizes. Such adjustments produce rate estimates for areas that have better properties than the unadjusted rates for use in making statistically based decisions about the entire set of areas. Examples are provided for county variation in bladder, stomach, and lung cancer mortality rates for U.S. white males for the period 1970 to 1979.