Control of Confounding and Reporting of Results in Causal Inference Studies. Guidance for Authors from Editors of Respiratory, Sleep, and Critical Care Journals

[...]we urge authors to consider using causal models when testing causal associations. [...]all other methods of controlling for confounding involve implicit assumptions about causal effects, which are not transparent to the reader. The observed associations between these covariates and the outcome...

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Published inAnnals of the American Thoracic Society Vol. 16; no. 1; pp. 22 - 28
Main Authors Lederer, David J., Bell, Scott C., Branson, Richard D., Chalmers, James D., Marshall, Rachel, Maslove, David M., Ost, David E., Punjabi, Naresh M., Schatz, Michael, Smyth, Alan R., Stewart, Paul W., Suissa, Samy, Adjei, Alex A., Akdis, Cezmi A., Azoulay, Élie, Bakker, Jan, Ballas, Zuhair K., Bardin, Philip G., Barreiro, Esther, Bellomo, Rinaldo, Bernstein, Jonathan A., Brusasco, Vito, Buchman, Timothy G., Chokroverty, Sudhansu, Collop, Nancy A., Crapo, James D., Fitzgerald, Dominic A., Hale, Lauren, Hart, Nicholas, Herth, Felix J., Iwashyna, Theodore J., Jenkins, Gisli, Kolb, Martin, Marks, Guy B., Mazzone, Peter, Moorman, J. Randall, Murphy, Thomas M., Noah, Terry L., Reynolds, Paul, Riemann, Dieter, Russell, Richard E., Sheikh, Aziz, Sotgiu, Giovanni, Swenson, Erik R., Szczesniak, Rhonda, Szymusiak, Ronald, Teboul, Jean-Louis, Vincent, Jean-Louis
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Thoracic Society 01.01.2019
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