This is the program for the 2010 Joint Statistical Meetings in Vancouver, British Columbia.

Keyword Search

Keyword Search Criteria: epidemiology returned 29 record(s)
Sunday, 08/01/2010
Rethinking John Snow: The Statistics of Cholera
Tom Koch, The University of British Columbia; Kenneth Denike, The University of British Columbia
2:05 PM

A Bayesian Surveillance System for Detecting Clusters of Noninfectious Diseases
Albert Y. Kim, University of Washington
2:35 PM

Identifying Vulnerable Populations Through an Examination of the Association Between Multipollutant Profiles and Measures of Deprivation
John Molitor, Imperial College, London; Jason Su, University of California, Berkeley; Sylvia Richardson, Imperial College, London; Michael Jerrett, University of California, Berkeley
2:50 PM

Tests of Trend Between Disease Outcomes and Ordinal Covariates
Naomi Brownstein, The University of North Carolina
3:20 PM

Network Model-Assisted Prevalence Estimation from Respondent-Driven Sampling Data
Krista J. Gile, Nuffield College; Mark S. Hancock, University of California, Los Angeles
4:05 PM

Using the Trend Odds Model in Seroepidemiological Studies
Ana W. Capuano, The University of Iowa; Gregory C. Gray, University of Florida; Jeffrey D. Dawson, The University of Iowa; R. William Field, University of Iowa
4:20 PM

Empirical Comparison of Different Drug Safety Signal Detection Assays Based on Incident User Designs
Maurice Alan Brookhart, Brigham and Women's Hospital/Harvard Medical School; Eric Brinsfield, SAS Institute
4:55 PM

Monday, 08/02/2010
Application of Fuzzy Clustering and Discriminant Analysis to Identify Neighborhood Population Characteristics and Health Needs
Ashely Pedigo, University of Tennessee; William Seaver, University of Tennessee; Agricola Odoi, University of Tennessee


Effects of Social and Psychological Factors on Health
Man Hung, The University of Utah; Melody Perez-Ollerton, The University of Utah


Association Study of Health Outcomes Based on Combined Data from Primary and Ancillary Surveys
Tianle Hu, University of Michigan; Trivellore Raghunathan, University of Michigan; Ana Diez-Roux, University of Michigan


SAS Programming for Pharmacoepidemiology Studies
Ying Su, Merck & Co., Inc.
9:35 AM

Probability in Decline
Dean Michael Brooks, Ekaros Analytical Inc.
9:55 AM

Bayesian Clustering and Sparse Modeling of Interactions in Epidemiology
Amy H. Herring, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill; David Dunson, Duke University
2:25 PM

Properties of Empirical Bayes Estimators for Evaluating Questionnaire Data in Epidemiology Studies
Jaya M. Satagopan, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center; Qin Zhou, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center; Susan Oliveria, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center; Stephen Dusza, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center; Martin Weinstock, Brown University; Marianne Berwick, University of New Mexico; Allan Halpern, Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
2:35 PM

Methods for Spatially Varying Measurement Error in Air Pollution Epidemiology
Stacey E. Alexeeff, Harvard School of Public Health; Alexandros Gryparis, Harvard School of Public Health; Joel Schwartz, Harvard School of Public Health; Brent A. Coull, Harvard School of Public Health
2:35 PM

On the Effect of Diagnostic Misclassification Bias on the Observed Spatial Pattern in Regional Count Data: A Simulation Study
Olaf Berke, University of Guelph
2:35 PM

The Variance Calculation Following Multiple Imputation: Illustration with Cholera Mortality Data Collected by John Snow
James A. Hanley, McGill University; Juli Atherton, McGill University
2:50 PM

A Geostatistical Approach to Disease Mapping for Aggregated Count Data Using GLMMs
Lauren Hund, Harvard University; Brent A. Coull, Harvard School of Public Health
3:20 PM

Tuesday, 08/03/2010
Nonidentifiability in the Context of Missing Confounders
Lawrence McCandless, Simon Fraser University
11:15 AM

Spatial Time-to-Event Analysis of Air Pollution and Preterm Birth
Howard Chang, Statistical and Applied Mathematical Sciences Institute; Brian Reich, North Carolina State University; Marie Lynn Miranda, Duke University
11:15 AM

Wednesday, 08/04/2010
Are There Latent Decision Rules in Expert Occupational Exposure Assessments?
David C. Wheeler, National Cancer Institute; Kai Yu, National Cancer Institute; Melissa Friesen, National Cancer Institute


Assessing North American Influenza Dynamics with Hierarchical Spatio-Temporal Models
Jessica Anderson, Utah State University; Mevin B. Hooten, Utah State University; Lance Waller, Emory University


Statistical Analysis of Data from Early Stage of Pandemic Influenza A(H1N1) 2009
Shenghai Zhang, Public Health Agency of Canada
8:35 AM

Application of Left Truncation Survival Methods in a Large Disease Registry: A Case Study with Practical Implications
Dave P. Miller, ICON Clinical Research; Aimee J. Foreman, ICON Clinical Research
8:35 AM

Statistical Inference in Factor Analysis for High-Dimension, Low-Sample-Size Data
Miguel Marino, Harvard University/Dana-Farber Cancer Institute; Yi Li, Harvard University/Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
10:50 AM

Semiparametric Adjustment for Temporal Confounding of Acute Air Pollution Effects in Cohort Studies
Adam A. Szpiro, University of Washington; Lianne Sheppard, University of Washington; Sara D. Adar, University of Michigan School of Public Health
11:20 AM

Determining the Genic Contribution to Disease by Evaluating Component SNPs
Benjamin Alan Goldstein, University of California, Berkeley; Alan Hubbard, University of California, Berkeley; Lisa Barcellos, University of California, Berkeley
11:20 AM

Thursday, 08/05/2010
A Novel Genome Continuum Model for Sequence-Based Association Studies
Li Luo, The University of Texas School of Public Health; Momiao Xiong, The University of Texas School of Public Health
8:35 AM

Trajectory of Postpartum Depression Screening Scores
Peter C. Wollan, Olmsted Medical Center; Barbara P. Yawn, Olmsted Medical Center
11:05 AM




2010 JSM Online Program Home

For information, contact jsm@amstat.org or phone (888) 231-3473.

If you have questions about the Continuing Education program, please contact the Education Department.