292 PART 5 Looking for Relationships with Correlation and Regression
In this chapter, we revisit the concept of confounding from Chapter 7 and explain
how to choose candidate covariates for your regression model. We also discuss
modeling approaches and explain how to add interaction terms to your
final model.
Staying Clearheaded about Confounding
Chapter 7 discusses study design and terminology in epidemiology. As a reminder,
in epidemiology, exposure refers to a factor you hypothesize to cause a disease (or
outcome). In your regression model, the outcome is the dependent variable. The
exposure will be one of the covariates in your model. But what other covariates
belong in the model? How do you decide on a collection of candidate-independent
variables that you would even consider putting in a model with the exposure? The
answer is that you choose them on the basis of their status as a potential
confounder.
A confounder is a factor that meets these three criteria:»
» It is associated with the exposure.»
» It is associated with the outcome.»
» It is not on the causal pathway between the exposure and outcome.
As an example, look at Figure 20-1, which illustrates a study of patients with
Type II diabetes where there is a hypothesized causal relationship between the
exposure of having served in the military and the negative outcome of having an
amputation due to diabetic complications.
As shown Figure 20-1, inability to exercise and low income are both seen as potential
confounders. That is because they are associated with both the exposure of mili-
tary service and the outcome of amputation, and they are not on the causal path-
way between military service and amputation. In other words, what is causing the
outcome of amputation is not also causing the patient’s inability to exercise, nor
is it also causing the patient to have low income. But whatever is causing the
patient’s amputation is also causing the patient’s retinopathy. That’s because
Type II diabetes causes poor circulation, which causes both retinopathy and
amputation. This means that retinopathy and amputation are on the same causal
pathway, and retinopathy cannot be considered a potential confounder.