Indirect Age Standardization
Indirect age standardization is a demographic technique for comparing the overall event rate (most often mortality) of a study population to a reference, when the population's own age-specific rates are too sparse or unstable to standardize directly. Instead of applying the study population's rates to a standard age structure, it does the reverse: it applies a stable set of standard age-specific rates to the study population's age distribution to compute the number of events that would be expected under the standard schedule. The ratio of observed to expected events is the standardized mortality (or morbidity) ratio, the SMR, and multiplying it by the standard's crude rate yields an indirectly standardized rate. The method is a staple of vital statistics and occupational and small-area epidemiology, and is developed from first principles in Preston, Heuveline and Guillot's demography text.
Registro de origen
Citas copiadas textualmente del registro de origen del método. No se infiere ninguna verificación a nivel de afirmación de ellas.
- Preston, S. H., Heuveline, P., & Guillot, M. (2001). Demography: Measuring and Modeling Population Processes. Blackwell Publishers. · ISBN 9781557864512
- Frome, E. L. (1983). The Analysis of Rates Using Poisson Regression Models. Biometrics, 39(3), 665-674. · DOI 10.2307/2531094
Afirmaciones curadas
Afirmaciones persistidas en el libro mayor de evidencia, cada una con su propia evaluación.
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Métodos relacionados
Generado a partir del grafo de métodos y mostrado como relaciones sugeridas por la máquina; no se infiere ninguna afirmación de evidencia.