Delivering spatially comparable inference on the risks of multiple severities of respiratory disease from spatially misaligned disease count data

Lee, D. and Anderson, C. (2022) Delivering spatially comparable inference on the risks of multiple severities of respiratory disease from spatially misaligned disease count data. Biometrics, (doi: 10.1111/biom.13739) (PMID:35972420) (Early Online Publication)

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Abstract

Population-level disease risk varies between communities, and public health professionals are interested in mapping this spatial variation to monitor the locations of high-risk areas and the magnitudes of health inequalities. Almost all of these risk maps relate to a single severity of disease outcome, such as hospitalisation, which thus ignores any cases of disease of a different severity, such as a mild case treated in a primary care setting. These spatially-varying risk maps are estimated from spatially aggregated disease count data, but the set of areal units to which these disease counts relate often vary by severity. Thus, the statistical challenge is to provide spatially comparable inference from multiple sets of spatially misaligned disease count data, and an additional complexity is that the spatial extents of the areal units for some severities are partially unknown. This paper thus proposes a novel spatial realignment approach for multivariate misaligned count data, and applies it to the first study delivering spatially comparable inference for multiple severities of the same disease. Inference is via a novel spatially smoothed data augmented Markov chain Monte Carlo algorithm, and the methods are motivated by a new study of respiratory disease risk in Scotland in 2017.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Early Online Publication
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Lee, Professor Duncan and Anderson, Dr Craig
Authors: Lee, D., and Anderson, C.
College/School:College of Science and Engineering > School of Mathematics and Statistics > Statistics
Journal Name:Biometrics
Publisher:Wiley
ISSN:0006-341X
ISSN (Online):1541-0420
Published Online:16 August 2022
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2022 The Authors
First Published:First published in Biometrics 2022
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons License

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