Identifying clusters in Bayesian disease mapping

Publication Type:
Journal Article
Citation:
Biostatistics, 2014, 15 (3), pp. 457 - 469
Issue Date:
2014-01-01
Filename Description Size
Identifying clusters in Bayesian disease mapping.pdfPublished Version1.41 MB
Adobe PDF
Full metadata record
Disease mapping is the field of spatial epidemiology interested in estimating the spatial pattern in disease risk across n areal units. One aim is to identify units exhibiting elevated disease risks, so that public health interventions can be made. Bayesian hierarchical models with a spatially smooth conditional autoregressive prior are used for this purpose, but they cannot identify the spatial extent of high-risk clusters. Therefore, we propose a two-stage solution to this problem, with the first stage being a spatially adjusted hierarchical agglomerative clustering algorithm. This algorithm is applied to data prior to the study period, and produces n potential cluster structures for the disease data. The second stage fits a separate Poisson log-linear model to the study data for each cluster structure, which allows for step-changes in risk where two clusters meet. The most appropriate cluster structure is chosen by model comparison techniques, specifically by minimizing the Deviance Information Criterion. The efficacy of the methodology is established by a simulation study, and is illustrated by a study of respiratory disease risk in Glasgow, Scotland. © 2014 The Author.
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: