It is a single volume that is 978 pages long and although it is expensive for an individual to purchase, it merits having in a biostatistics library or any technical library where medical research is conducted.
Here is a selected list of topics: Age-Period-Cohort Analysis, Berkson's Fallacy, Bias, Bias in Obersvational Studies, Case-Cohort Study, Case-Control Study, Causation, Cornfield's Inequality, Cox Regression Model, Death Indexes, Demography, Dose-Response, Epidemiology as Legal Evidence, Frequency Matching,Hawthorne Effect, Kappa, Length Bias, Life Table, Logistic Regression, Meta-Analysis in Epidemiology, Occupational Mortality, Odds Ratio, Prevalence, Propensity Score,Retrospective Study, Selection Bias, Simpson's Paradox, and Validation Study.
Among the contributors are Peter Armitage, Norman Breslow, Ray Carroll, Ted Colton, Mitch Gail, Joe Gastwirth, David Hosmer, Gary Koch, Stanley Lemeshow, Rod Little, Ross Prentice, George Seber, Butch Tsiatis, and Michael Vaeth. The work is very much up-to-date as it was published in 2000. It includes updates of many articles that were in the highly praised six volume Encyclopedia of Biostatistics. It concentrates on those articles that focus on topics important to epidemiology. It also includes several articles written specifically for this volume.
Featuring contributions from leading experts in academia, government and industry, the Encyclopedia of Epidemiologic Methods has been designed to complement existing texts on the subject by providing further extensive, up-to-date coverage of specialised topics and by introducing the reader to the research literature.
Offering a wealth of information in a single resource, the Encyclopedia of Epidemiologic Methods Offers an excellent introduction to a vast array of specialised topics Includes in-depth coverage of the statistical underpinnings of contemporary epidemiologic methods Provides concise definitions and introductions to numerous concepts found in the current literature Uses extensive cross-references, helping to facilitate further research, and enabling the reader to locate definitions and related concepts
In addition to featuring extensive articles in the areas of descriptive and analytic epidemiology, the Encyclopedia also provides the reader with articles on case-control design and offers substantial coverage of allied statistical methods.
From the Reviews?. "a selection of excellent articles" (Short Book Reviews, December 2001)
"The articles were written by experts...hence the quality of entries is quite good. The editors have done an excellent job..." (Journal of the American Statistical Association, December 2001)
"There is no doubt that this?is an invaluable tool for researchers involved in medical and public health research as it offers an excellent springboard for acquiring and strengthening practical and methodological tools." (Short Book Reviews, Vol. 21, No. 3, December 2001)
"...illuminating and comprehensive and often of extremely high quality..." (Biometrics, September 2002)