Model building and assessment of the impact of covariates for disease prevalence mapping in low-resource settings: To explain and to predict: To explain and to predict

Emanuele Giorgi, Claudio Fronterrè, Peter M. Macharia, Victor A. Alegana, Robert W. Snow, Peter Diggle

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

26 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

This paper provides statistical guidance on the development and application of model-based geostatistical methods for disease prevalence mapping. We illustrate the different stages of the analysis, from exploratory analysis to spatial prediction of prevalence, through a case study on malaria mapping in Tanzania. Throughout the paper, we distinguish between predictive modelling, whose main focus is on maximizing the predictive accuracy of the model, and explanatory modelling, where greater emphasis is placed on understanding the relationships between the health outcome and risk factors. We demonstrate that these two paradigms can result in different modelling choices. We also propose a simple approach for detecting over-fitting based on inspection of the correlation matrix of the estimators of the regression coefficients. To enhance the interpretability of geostatistical models, we introduce the concept of domain effects in order to assist variable selection and model validation. The statistical ideas and principles illustrated here in the specific context of disease prevalence mapping are more widely applicable to any regression model for the analysis of epidemiological outcomes but are particularly relevant to geostatistical models, for which the separation between fixed and random effects can be ambiguous.
Original languageEnglish
Article number20210104
JournalJournal of The Royal Society, Interface
Volume18
Issue number179
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jun 2021
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • disease mapping
  • explanatory modelling
  • geostatistics
  • predictive modelling
  • prevalence
  • spatial correlation

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