Causal and Associational Language in Observational Health Research: A Systematic Evaluation.

Noah A Haber; Sarah E Wieten; Julia M Rohrer; Onyebuchi A Arah; Peter WG Tennant; Elizabeth A Stuart; Eleanor J Murray; Sophie Pilleron; Sze Tung Lam; Emily Riederer; +39 more... Sarah Jane Howcutt; Alison E Simmons; Clémence Leyrat ORCID logo; Philipp Schoenegger; Anna Booman; Mi-Suk Kang Dufour; Ashley L O'Donoghue; Rebekah Baglini; Stefanie Do; Mari De La Rosa Takashima; Thomas Rhys Evans; Daloha Rodriguez-Molina; Taym M Alsalti; Daniel J Dunleavy; Gideon Meyerowitz-Katz; Alberto Antonietti; Jose A Calvache; Mark J Kelson; Meg G Salvia; Camila Olarte Parra; Saman Khalatbari-Soltani; Taylor McLinden; Arthur Chatton; Jessie Seiler; Andreea Steriu; Talal S Alshihayb; Sarah E Twardowski; Julia Dabravolskaj; Eric Au; Rachel A Hoopsick; Shashank Suresh; Nicholas Judd; Sebastián Peña; Cathrine Axfors; Palwasha Khan ORCID logo; Ariadne E Rivera Aguirre; Nnaemeka U Odo; Ian Schmid; Matthew P Fox; (2022) Causal and Associational Language in Observational Health Research: A Systematic Evaluation. American journal of epidemiology, 191 (12). pp. 2084-2097. ISSN 0002-9262 DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwac137
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We estimated the degree to which language used in the high-profile medical/public health/epidemiology literature implied causality using language linking exposures to outcomes and action recommendations; examined disconnects between language and recommendations; identified the most common linking phrases; and estimated how strongly linking phrases imply causality. We searched for and screened 1,170 articles from 18 high-profile journals (65 per journal) published from 2010-2019. Based on written framing and systematic guidance, 3 reviewers rated the degree of causality implied in abstracts and full text for exposure/outcome linking language and action recommendations. Reviewers rated the causal implication of exposure/outcome linking language as none (no causal implication) in 13.8%, weak in 34.2%, moderate in 33.2%, and strong in 18.7% of abstracts. The implied causality of action recommendations was higher than the implied causality of linking sentences for 44.5% or commensurate for 40.3% of articles. The most common linking word in abstracts was "associate" (45.7%). Reviewers' ratings of linking word roots were highly heterogeneous; over half of reviewers rated "association" as having at least some causal implication. This research undercuts the assumption that avoiding "causal" words leads to clarity of interpretation in medical research.

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