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Disease Mapping×Small-Area Health Estimation×
Lĩnh vựcSpatial EpidemiologySocial Epidemiology
HọProcess / pipelineRegression model
Năm ra đời19871979
Người khởi xướngDavid Clayton & Jack Kaldor (empirical Bayes); Andrew Lawson (Bayesian hierarchical synthesis)Robert E. Fay & Roger A. Herriot; J. N. K. Rao & Isabel Molina
LoạiPipeline for estimating and smoothing small-area disease relative risk from countsModel-based estimator for reliable indicators in data-sparse areas
Công trình gốcClayton, D., & Kaldor, J. (1987). Empirical Bayes estimates of age-standardized relative risks for use in disease mapping. Biometrics, 43(3), 671-681. DOI ↗Fay, R. E., & Herriot, R. A. (1979). Estimates of Income for Small Places: An Application of James-Stein Procedures to Census Data. Journal of the American Statistical Association, 74(366), 269-277. DOI ↗
Tên gọi khácSmall-Area Risk Mapping, Relative-Risk Smoothing, Empirical Bayes Disease Mapping, Spatial Risk EstimationSmall Area Estimation for Health, Fay-Herriot Health Estimation, Model-Based Small-Area Prevalence, Local Health Indicator Estimation
Liên quan43
Tóm tắtDisease mapping is the set of model-based methods for estimating and displaying the geographic distribution of disease risk across small areas. Its central problem is that raw area-level rates, especially standardized mortality or incidence ratios, are statistically unstable where populations are small: a handful of cases can produce wildly high or low rates that reflect chance rather than true risk. Clayton and Kaldor's 1987 empirical-Bayes paper showed how to stabilize these estimates by shrinking each area's rate toward an overall mean using a Poisson-gamma (or log-normal) hierarchical model, and the approach was developed into the fully Bayesian, spatially smoothed hierarchical framework synthesized in Lawson's textbook. As a pipeline, disease mapping computes expected counts, places the counts in a hierarchical risk model, borrows strength globally and across neighbors to smooth the estimates, and produces a risk map with quantified uncertainty, including probabilities that risk exceeds a threshold.Small-area estimation produces reliable health indicators for places where the survey sample is too thin to support a trustworthy direct estimate. A national health survey may interview only a handful of people in a given county or census tract, so a county-level prevalence computed straight from the data swings wildly from area to area. The model-based solution, pioneered by Robert Fay and Roger Herriot in 1979 for estimating income in small places, is to borrow strength: combine each area's noisy direct estimate with a regression prediction built from auxiliary variables that are known for every area, weighting the two by their relative reliability. Rao and Molina's comprehensive treatment codified this area-level mixed model and its variants as the foundation of small area estimation. Applied to public health, the approach underpins local prevalence maps for chronic disease and health behaviors, such as the CDC PLACES project, that decision-makers use to target resources at neighborhood and county scale.
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