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Variation in National Survey Estimates and Youth Traumatic Brain Injury—Where Does the Truth Lie?

Variation in National Survey Estimates and Youth Traumatic Brain Injury—Where Does the Truth Lie? Letters 4. Schneider FD, Loveland Cook CA, Salas J, Scherrer J, Cleveland IN, Burge SK; the sample of adolescent respondents (n = 14 765), 15.1% in- Residency Research Network of Texas Investigators. Childhood trauma, social dicated at least 1 concussion during the past year (note that life- networks, and the mental health of adult survivors. J Interpers Violence.2017: time prevalence of head injuries could not be obtained be- cause the measure assessed past 12 months). As seen here, 4 5. Lanier P, Maguire-Jack K, Lombardi B, Frey J, Rose RA. Adverse childhood national studies provide very different estimates, and the sub- experiences and child health outcomes: comparing cumulative risk and latent class approaches. Matern Child Health J. 2018;22(3):288-297. doi:10.1007/ stantial variation in the estimates is likely owing to how the s10995-017-2365-1 question is asked, who is responding to the questions, and the mode of survey delivery. Clinicians and researchers need to Variation in National Survey Estimates and Youth be aware of this sensitivity and be cautious of these measure- ment issues in large-scale epidemiologic surveys. Traumatic Brain Injury—Where Does the Truth Lie? To the Editor Haarbauer-Krupa et al present data from the Na- tional Survey of Children’s Health (2011-2012) http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png JAMA Pediatrics American Medical Association

Variation in National Survey Estimates and Youth Traumatic Brain Injury—Where Does the Truth Lie?

JAMA Pediatrics , Volume 173 (4) – Apr 25, 2019

Variation in National Survey Estimates and Youth Traumatic Brain Injury—Where Does the Truth Lie?

Abstract

Letters 4. Schneider FD, Loveland Cook CA, Salas J, Scherrer J, Cleveland IN, Burge SK; the sample of adolescent respondents (n = 14 765), 15.1% in- Residency Research Network of Texas Investigators. Childhood trauma, social dicated at least 1 concussion during the past year (note that life- networks, and the mental health of adult survivors. J Interpers Violence.2017: time prevalence of head injuries could not be obtained be- cause the measure assessed past 12 months). As seen here, 4 5....
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References (2)

Publisher
American Medical Association
Copyright
Copyright 2019 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved.
ISSN
2168-6203
eISSN
2168-6211
DOI
10.1001/jamapediatrics.2019.0001
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Letters 4. Schneider FD, Loveland Cook CA, Salas J, Scherrer J, Cleveland IN, Burge SK; the sample of adolescent respondents (n = 14 765), 15.1% in- Residency Research Network of Texas Investigators. Childhood trauma, social dicated at least 1 concussion during the past year (note that life- networks, and the mental health of adult survivors. J Interpers Violence.2017: time prevalence of head injuries could not be obtained be- cause the measure assessed past 12 months). As seen here, 4 5. Lanier P, Maguire-Jack K, Lombardi B, Frey J, Rose RA. Adverse childhood national studies provide very different estimates, and the sub- experiences and child health outcomes: comparing cumulative risk and latent class approaches. Matern Child Health J. 2018;22(3):288-297. doi:10.1007/ stantial variation in the estimates is likely owing to how the s10995-017-2365-1 question is asked, who is responding to the questions, and the mode of survey delivery. Clinicians and researchers need to Variation in National Survey Estimates and Youth be aware of this sensitivity and be cautious of these measure- ment issues in large-scale epidemiologic surveys. Traumatic Brain Injury—Where Does the Truth Lie? To the Editor Haarbauer-Krupa et al present data from the Na- tional Survey of Children’s Health (2011-2012)

Journal

JAMA PediatricsAmerican Medical Association

Published: Apr 25, 2019

There are no references for this article.