Meta-analytic case-crossover design
The meta-analytic case-crossover design combines the within-person control structure of the case-crossover study with formal meta-analytic pooling across multiple studies. Each contributing study uses cases as their own controls by comparing exposure windows immediately preceding an acute event to matched reference windows in the same individual. The pooled approach synthesizes conditional odds ratios across studies, maximizing statistical power and generalizability — commonly applied to short-term environmental exposures such as air pollution, temperature extremes, and drug triggers of acute events.
Source record
Citations copied verbatim from the method’s source record. No claim-level verification is inferred from them.
- Maclure, M. (1991). The case-crossover design: a method for studying transient effects on the risk of acute events. American Journal of Epidemiology, 133(2), 144–153. · DOI 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a115853
- Bateson, T. F., & Schwartz, J. (2001). Selection bias and confounding in case-crossover analyses of environmental time-series data. Epidemiology, 12(6), 654–661. · DOI 10.1097/00001648-200111000-00013
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