S
Stephen R. Cole
Researcher at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Publications - 468
Citations - 29616
Stephen R. Cole is an academic researcher from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Hazard ratio. The author has an hindex of 76, co-authored 434 publications receiving 25441 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephen R. Cole include Centers for Disease Control and Prevention & United States Department of Veterans Affairs.
Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Constructing Inverse Probability Weights for Marginal Structural Models
TL;DR: The authors describe possible tradeoffs that an epidemiologist may encounter when attempting to make inferences and weight truncation is presented as an informal and easily implemented method to deal with these tradeoffs.
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Overadjustment bias and unnecessary adjustment in epidemiologic studies.
TL;DR: This work uses causal diagrams and an empirical example (the effect of maternal smoking on neonatal mortality) to illustrate and clarify the definition of overadjustment bias, and to distinguish over adjustment bias from unnecessary adjustment.
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Competing Risk Regression Models for Epidemiologic Data
TL;DR: 3 regression approaches for estimating 2 key quantities in competing risks analysis: the cause-specific relative hazard (cs)RH and the subdistribution relative hazard ((sd)RH) and the interpretation of parameters obtained with these methods are outlined.
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Fruit and vegetable intake and risk of cardiovascular disease: the Women's Health Study
Simin Liu,JoAnn E. Manson,I-Min Lee,Stephen R. Cole,Charles H. Hennekens,Walter C. Willett,Julie E. Buring +6 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that higher intake of fruit and vegetables may be protective against CVD and support current dietary guidelines to increase fruit and vegetable intake.
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Antiretroviral therapy and the prevalence and incidence of diabetes mellitus in the multicenter AIDS cohort study.
Todd T. Brown,Stephen R. Cole,Xiuhong Li,Lawrence A. Kingsley,Frank J. Palella,Sharon A. Riddler,Barbara R. Visscher,Joseph B. Margolick,Adrian S. Dobs +8 more
TL;DR: The incidence of diabetes mellitus in HIV-infected men with HAART exposure was greater than 4 times that of HIV-seronegative men, representing a risk that is higher than previous estimates.