Publication related to RSI or an RSI staff member

Recall bias in the assessment of exposure to mobile phones.

Authors

  • Vrijheid, Martine, Vrijheid M, Radiation Group, International Agency for Research on Cancer, Lyon, France. mvrijheid@creal.cat

  • Armstrong, Bruce K, Armstrong BK,

  • Bedard, Daniel, Bedard D,

  • Brown, Julianne, Brown J,

  • Deltour, Isabelle, Deltour I,

  • Iavarone, Ivano, Iavarone I,

  • Krewski, Daniel, Krewski D,

  • Lagorio, Susanna, Lagorio S,

  • Moore, Stephen, Moore S,

  • Richardson, Lesley, Richardson L,

  • Giles, Graham G, Giles GG,

  • McBride, Mary, McBride M,

  • Parent, Marie-Elise, Parent ME,

  • Siemiatycki, Jack, Siemiatycki J,

  • Cardis, Elisabeth, Cardis E,

YEAR OF PUBLICATION: 2009
SOURCE: J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol. 2009 May;19(4):369-81. doi: 10.1038/jes.2008.27. Epub 2008 May 21.
JOURNAL TITLE ABBREVIATION: J Expo Sci Environ Epidemiol
JOURNAL TITLE: Journal of exposure science & environmental epidemiology
ISSN: 1559-064X (Electronic) 1559-0631 (Linking)
VOLUME: 19
ISSUE: 4
PAGES: 369-81
PLACE OF PUBLICATION: United States
ABSTRACT:
Most studies of mobile phone use are case-control studies that rely on participants' reports of past phone use for their exposure assessment. Differential errors in recalled phone use are a major concern in such studies. INTERPHONE, a multinational case-control study of brain tumour risk and mobile phone use, included validation studies to quantify such errors and evaluate the potential for recall bias. Mobile phone records of 212 cases and 296 controls were collected from network operators in three INTERPHONE countries over an average of 2 years, and compared with mobile phone use reported at interview. The ratio of reported to recorded phone use was analysed as measure of agreement. Mean ratios were virtually the same for cases and controls: both underestimated number of calls by a factor of 0.81 and overestimated call duration by a factor of 1.4. For cases, but not controls, ratios increased with increasing time before the interview; however, these trends were based on few subjects with long-term data. Ratios increased by level of use. Random recall errors were large. In conclusion, there was little evidence for differential recall errors overall or in recent time periods. However, apparent overestimation by cases in more distant time periods could cause positive bias in estimates of disease risk associated with mobile phone use.
LANGUAGE: eng
DATE OF PUBLICATION: 2009 May
DATE OF ELECTRONIC PUBLICATION: 20080521
DATE COMPLETED: 20090702
DATE REVISED: 20171116
MESH DATE: 2009/07/03 09:00
EDAT: 2008/05/22 09:00
STATUS: MEDLINE
PUBLICATION STATUS: ppublish
LOCATION IDENTIFIER: 10.1038/jes.2008.27 [doi]
OWNER: NLM

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Daniel Krewski

Chief Risk Scientist

Dr. Daniel Krewski is Chief Risk Scientist and co-founder of Risk Sciences International (RSI), a firm established in 2006 to bring evidence-based, multidisciplinary expertise to the challenge of understanding, managing, and communicating risk. As RSI’s inaugural CEO and long-time scientific...
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