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J Am Med Inform Assoc 2009;16:847-854 doi:10.1197/jamia.M2788
  • Original Investigation
  • Research Paper

Power to Detect Spatial Disturbances under Different Levels of Geographic Aggregation

  1. Caroline Jeffery,
  2. Al Ozonoff,
  3. Laura F White,
  4. Miriam Nuño,
  5. Marcello Pagano
  1. Affiliations of the authors: Department of Biostatistics(CJ, AO, LFW, MN,MP), Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, MA; Department of Biostatistics(AO, LFW), Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, MA
  1. Correspondence: Caroline Jeffery, MA, Department of Biostatistics, Harvard School of Public Health, 655 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115
  • Received 12 March 2008
  • Accepted 1 August 2009

Abstract

Objective Spatio and/or temporal surveillance systems are designed to monitor the ongoing appearance of disease cases in space and time, and to detect potential disturbances in either dimension. Patient addresses are sometimes reported at some level of geographic aggregation, for example by ZIP code or census tract. While this aggregation has the advantage of protecting patient privacy, it also risks compromising statistical efficiency. This paper investigated the variation in power to detect a change in the spatial distribution in the presence of spatial aggregation.

Methods The authors generated 400,000 spatial datasets with varying location and spread of simulated spatial disturbances, both on a purely synthetic uniform population, and on a heterogeneous population, representing hospital admissions to three community hospitals in Cape Cod, Massachusetts. The authors evaluated the power of the M-statistic to detect spatial disturbances, comparing the use of exact spatial locations versus twelve different levels of aggregation, where the M-statistic is a comparison of two distributions of interpoint distances between locations.

Results When the spread of simulated spatial disturbances was contained to a small portion of the study region or affects a large proportion of the population at risk, power was highest when exact locations were reported. If the spatial disturbance was a more modest signal, the best power was attained at an aggregated level.

Conclusions The precision at which patients' locations are reported has the potential to affect the power of detection significantly.

Footnotes

  • The research in this paper was funded by a grant from the National Institutes of Health, R01 EB0006195.

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