Fitting a Bivariate Measurement Error Model for Episodically Consumed Dietary Components
There has been great public health interest in estimating usual, i.e., long-term average, intake of episodically consumed dietary components that are not consumed daily by everyone, e.g., fish, red meat and whole grains. Short-term measurements of episodically consumed dietary components have zero-inflated skewed distributions. So-called two-part models have been developed for such data in order to correct for measurement error due to within-person variation and to estimate the distribution of usual intake of the dietary component in the univariate case. However, there is arguably much greater public health interest in the usual intake of an episodically consumed dietary component adjusted for energy (caloric) intake, e.g., ounces of whole grains per 1000 kilo-calories, which reflects usual dietary composition and adjusts for different total amounts of caloric intake. Because of this public health interest, it is important to have models to fit such data, and it is important that the model-fitting methods can be applied to all episodically consumed dietary components.
Year of publication: |
2011
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Authors: | Saijuan, Zhang ; Krebs-Smith Susan M. ; Douglas, Midthune ; Adriana, Perez ; Buckman Dennis W. ; Victor, Kipnis ; Freedman Laurence S. ; Dodd Kevin W. ; J, Carroll Raymond |
Published in: |
The International Journal of Biostatistics. - De Gruyter, ISSN 1557-4679. - Vol. 7.2011, 1, p. 1-32
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Publisher: |
De Gruyter |
Saved in:
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