2004
DOI: 10.1353/pbm.2004.0032
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Skepticism, Statistical Methods, and the Cigarette: A Historical Analysis of a Methodological Debate

Abstract: The discipline of modern "risk factor" epidemiology was in its formative stages in the early 1950s, when epidemiologic studies revealed a strong association between cigarette smoking and lung cancer mortality. Many medical scientists and physicians were reluctant to accept these studies as a demonstration of causation because the methods were "statistical" and involved data collected in uncontrolled conditions outside the laboratory. But a substantial number of senior biostatisticians and epidemiologists also … Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…While this approach is well-tested in epidemiological applications (Parascandola, 2004), it has only recently been applied to predict ecological associations, and, as such, has limitations unique to this application. To further evaluate this prediction method, we performed a modified ‘leave-one-out’ analysis, whereby we trained a model to a dataset from which a well-studied virus had been omitted, and then predicted vectors for this virus and compared them against a list of known vectors.…”
Section: Materials and Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While this approach is well-tested in epidemiological applications (Parascandola, 2004), it has only recently been applied to predict ecological associations, and, as such, has limitations unique to this application. To further evaluate this prediction method, we performed a modified ‘leave-one-out’ analysis, whereby we trained a model to a dataset from which a well-studied virus had been omitted, and then predicted vectors for this virus and compared them against a list of known vectors.…”
Section: Materials and Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The strong link between cigarette smoking and increased risk of mortality has been well established since 1950 (Doll 1999; Parascandola 2004). Cigarette smoking increases the risk of cardiovascular disease, lung cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease mortality, and nearly fifty other causes of death.…”
Section: Risk Factors: Smoking and Obesitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For them, the scientifi c recognition of the new statistical methodology and the virtue of its application in biology and medicine were also at stake: while promoting it, they nevertheless wanted to ensure its seriousness and to protect it from approximate medical use (Parascandola 2004 ). For them, the scientifi c recognition of the new statistical methodology and the virtue of its application in biology and medicine were also at stake: while promoting it, they nevertheless wanted to ensure its seriousness and to protect it from approximate medical use (Parascandola 2004 ).…”
Section: Causal Inference: the Causal Status Of Risk Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%