The impact of a prevention effort on the community.
暂无分享,去创建一个
[1] B. Rockhill,et al. Theorizing About Causes at the Individual Level While Estimating Effects at the Population Level: Implications for Prevention , 2005, Epidemiology.
[2] C. Bain. RESPONSE: Re: Are Women More Susceptible to Lung Cancer? , 2004 .
[3] J. Mclaughlin,et al. RESPONSE: Re: Are Women More Susceptible to Lung Cancer? , 2004 .
[4] A. Miller,et al. Re: Are women more susceptible to lung cancer? , 2004, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
[5] Chris Bain,et al. Lung cancer rates in men and women with comparable histories of smoking. , 2004, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
[6] J. Mclaughlin,et al. Are women more susceptible to lung cancer? , 2004, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
[7] M. Pepe,et al. Limitations of the odds ratio in gauging the performance of a diagnostic, prognostic, or screening marker. , 2004, American journal of epidemiology.
[8] J. Mclaughlin,et al. Comment on: Are women more susceptible to lung cancer? Author's reply , 2004 .
[9] A. Morabia. The essential tension between absolute and relative causality. , 2001, American journal of public health.
[10] J. Benichou,et al. Attributable risk: advantages of a broad definition of exposure. , 1994, American journal of epidemiology.
[11] O S Miettinen,et al. Proportion of disease caused or prevented by a given exposure, trait or intervention. , 1974, American journal of epidemiology.
[12] B. Macmahon,et al. Attributable risk percent in case-control studies. , 1971, British journal of preventive & social medicine.
[13] B. Macmahon,et al. Epidemiology: Principles and Methods , 1970 .