Difference between revisions of "Critical Limitations of Digital Epidemiology (Q4748)"
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(Created claim: quote (P203): From a statistical and methodological perspective, the use of smart devices suffers from under-coverage and non response, which are rarely addressed by proponents of digital epidemiology. [..]. For COVID-19 surveillance, we recommend that instead of digital epidemiology, available routine data and random samples should be used) |
(Created claim: quote (P203): The main methodological problem is the selection process described. The sample of the population actually using the app will not be a random sample. It seems likely that especially subpopulations with a higher prevalence of undetected infections will have lower coverage rates by the apps:) |
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+ | The main methodological problem is the selection process described. The sample of the population actually using the app will not be a random sample. It seems likely that especially subpopulations with a higher prevalence of undetected infections will have lower coverage rates by the apps: | ||
Property / quote: The main methodological problem is the selection process described. The sample of the population actually using the app will not be a random sample. It seems likely that especially subpopulations with a higher prevalence of undetected infections will have lower coverage rates by the apps: / rank | |||
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Revision as of 12:10, 11 June 2020
journal article from 'Survey Research Methods' published in 2020
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
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English |
Critical Limitations of Digital Epidemiology
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journal article from 'Survey Research Methods' published in 2020
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Statements
From a statistical and methodological perspective, the use of smart devices suffers from under-coverage and non response, which are rarely addressed by proponents of digital epidemiology. [..]. For COVID-19 surveillance, we recommend that instead of digital epidemiology, available routine data and random samples should be used
0 references
The main methodological problem is the selection process described. The sample of the population actually using the app will not be a random sample. It seems likely that especially subpopulations with a higher prevalence of undetected infections will have lower coverage rates by the apps:
0 references