Business Bias: How Epidemiologic Studies May Underestimate or Fail to Detect Increased Risks of Cancer and Other Diseases
VALERIO GENNARO, MD, LORENZO TOMATIS, MD
Abstract
In spite of claiming primary prevention as their aim,
studies of potential occupational and environmental
health hazards that are funded either directly or indirectly
by industry are likely to have negative results. The
authors present three common scenarios in which faulty
design of epidemiologic studies skews results, and list 15
study design flaws that lead to results that are dangerously
misleading with regard to both the evaluation and
the improvement of public health.
studies of potential occupational and environmental
health hazards that are funded either directly or indirectly
by industry are likely to have negative results. The
authors present three common scenarios in which faulty
design of epidemiologic studies skews results, and list 15
study design flaws that lead to results that are dangerously
misleading with regard to both the evaluation and
the improvement of public health.
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