Self-Controlled Case Series
The self-controlled case series, or SCCS, is a case-only study design for estimating the association between a transient exposure and an acute event by comparing each individual's event rate during exposed time windows with their rate during unexposed time windows. Developed by Paddy Farrington in 1995 for vaccine safety evaluation, it uses data only on people who experienced the outcome, and because each person serves as their own control, it automatically eliminates all fixed within-person confounders — genetics, sex, chronic conditions, socioeconomic position — without ever measuring them. A conditional Poisson likelihood removes the individual-level baseline rate and yields a relative incidence comparing risk to control periods. Whitaker, Farrington, Spiessens and Musonda's 2006 Statistics in Medicine tutorial is the standard practical guide to fitting and interpreting the model.
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来源
- Farrington, C. P. (1995). Relative Incidence Estimation from Case Series for Vaccine Safety Evaluation. Biometrics, 51(1), 228-235. DOI: 10.2307/2533328 ↗
- Whitaker, H. J., Farrington, C. P., Spiessens, B., & Musonda, P. (2006). Tutorial in Biostatistics: The Self-Controlled Case Series Method. Statistics in Medicine, 25(10), 1768-1797. DOI: 10.1002/sim.2302 ↗
如何引用本页
ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Self-Controlled Case Series (Within-Person Relative Incidence of Acute Events After Transient Exposures). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/zh/social-epidemiology/self-controlled-case-series
选用哪种方法?
将本方法与其最相近的同类并置,并排研读——本馆将书籍铺陈于案上,取舍则由您定夺。
- Case-Time-Control DesignSocial Epidemiology↔ 比较
- Negative Control Outcome DesignSocial Epidemiology↔ 比较
- Poisson Rate RegressionSocial Epidemiology↔ 比较