The methodology of health impact assessment (HIA), originally proposed by WHO, is widely used to predict the potential health effects in a community living in a place in which a new project (e.g., an industrial plant) will be implemented. One of the key quantities to calculate the impact (i.e., the number of attributable cases) is the baseline (i.e., before the project implementation) rate of selected diseases in the community. In a recent paper on this journal, this methodology has been challenged. Specifically, the use of baseline rate has been questioned, proposing to use only the fraction of the baseline rate due to the exposures related to the project, and not the rate due to all risk factors for the disease. In this commentary, we argue that the proposal is logically and epidemiologically unsound, and devoid of scientific motivation. The conclusion that the traditional approach overestimates the health impact should be rejected as based on flawed assumptions. On the contrary, the proposal may produce a (seriously biased) underestimation of attributable cases.
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机译:健康影响评估 (HIA) 方法最初由 WHO 提出,被广泛用于预测居住在将实施新项目(例如工业厂房)的地方的社区的潜在健康影响。计算影响(即可归因病例的数量)的关键量之一是社区中选定疾病的基线(即项目实施前)发生率。在该期刊最近发表的一篇论文中,这种方法受到了挑战。具体来说,基线率的使用受到质疑,建议仅使用由于与项目相关的暴露而导致的基线率的分数,而不是由于疾病的所有风险因素引起的率。在这篇评论中,我们认为该提案在逻辑和流行病学上都是不合理的,并且缺乏科学动机。传统方法高估了健康影响的结论应该被拒绝,因为它是基于有缺陷的假设。相反,该提案可能会产生对可归因案例的(严重偏见)低估。
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