Investigation of bias due to loss of participants in a Dutch multicentre prospective spinal cord injury cohort study.

Authors

  • Sonja de Groot
  • Janneke A. Haisma
  • Marcel W.M. Post
  • Floris W.A. van Asbeck
  • Lucas H.V. van der Woude

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-0346

Keywords:

spinal cord injuries, rehabilitation, prospective studies, follow-up studies, patient dropouts.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine bias due to loss of participants (attrition bias) in a prospective cohort study. DESIGN: A multi-centre prospective cohort study. SUBJECTS: A total of 225 individuals with a spinal cord injury from 8 Dutch rehabilitation centres. METHODS: Participants were considered non-participants when no information was collected at the measurement one year after discharge from inpatient rehabilitation. Using bivariate tests participants and non-participants were compared regarding personal, lesion, function and functional characteristics determined at the beginning of inpatient rehabilitation and at discharge. A logistic regression was performed to determine which characteristics predict participation at one year after discharge. RESULTS: Of the participants at the start of the study, 31% (n = 69) did not perform the tests one year after discharge from inpatient rehabilitation. Variables associated with study participation one year after discharge were: higher level of education, higher well-being score at the start of rehabilitation, and a shorter length of stay in hospital and rehabilitation centre at discharge of inpatient rehabilitation. CONCLUSION: Selective attrition in the longitudinal study might have led to an over-estimation of some of the results of the measurement one year after discharge from inpatient rehabilitation.

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Published

2009-02-16

How to Cite

de Groot, S., Haisma, J. A., Post, M. W., van Asbeck, F. W., & van der Woude, L. H. (2009). Investigation of bias due to loss of participants in a Dutch multicentre prospective spinal cord injury cohort study. Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 41(5), 382–389. https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-0346

Issue

Section

Original Report