Skip to main content
MHRA logo
Clinical Practice Research Datalink
UK data driving real-world evidence
  • Home
    • Senior management team
    • Job vacancies
  • News
  • Public
    • Safeguarding patient data
    • CPRD Safe - our Trusted Research Environment
    • CPRD case studies
    • Approved studies
    • Data use audits
    • Data protection notice
    • Opt out of research
  • Data
    • Primary care data
      • Data quality
    • Linked data
    • Algorithm derived data
    • Synthetic data
    • DOIs
    • Research applications
      • Data access
      • Review committees
  • Our services
    • Interventional studies
      • CPRD SPRINT
      • CPRD PROVE
    • Observational research
      • CPRD-enabled research
    • Pricing
  • General Practitioner
    • Quality improvement reports for GPs
    • Safeguarding patient data
    • How your data makes a difference
    • What we do with information about you
  • Research
    • Bibliography
  • Training modules
    • Introduction to CPRD
    • Using CPRD primary care data
    • Using linked data
    • How to access CPRD data
    • Defining your study population
    • For MSL holders
    • Denominator data
    • CPRD eRAP: a guide for users
    • CPRD Safe features: a guide for users
    • CPRD Safe training and guidance

Breadcrumb

  1. Home

Using Quantitative Bias Analysis to Adjust for Misclassification of COVID-19 Outcomes: An Applied Example of Inhaled Corticosteroids and COVID-19 Outcomes

Author
M. Bokern
C. Rentsch
J. Quint
J. Hunnicutt
I. Douglas
A. Schultze
Keywords
Humans
Administration, Inhalation
*COVID-19/epidemiology
Female
Male
*Adrenal Cortex Hormones/administration & dosage/therapeutic use
*Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data
Aged
Middle Aged
*Bias
*Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive/drug therapy
United Kingdom/epidemiology
COVID-19 Drug Treatment
pharmacoepidemiology
Cohort Studies
Treatment Outcome
Adrenergic beta-2 Receptor Agonists/administration & dosage
Covid‐19
Misclassification
quantitative bias analysis
respiratory epidemiology
quantitative bias analysis in observational studies of COVID‐19
Year of Publication
2025
Journal
Pharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf
Volume
34
Number of Pages
e70086
ISBN Number
1053-8569 (Print)
1053-8569
Accession Number
39776023
DOI
10.1002/pds.70086
  • DOI
  • Google Scholar
  • BibTeX
  • EndNote X3 XML
  • EndNote 7 XML
  • Endnote tagged
  • Marc
  • RIS

Stethoscope

GP practices - Join today

Safety studies logo

Researcher log in

stick people holding hands

Research applications

LinkedIn
Twitter
Youtube
NIHR logo

Support links

  • Accessibility statement
  • Contact
  • Privacy notice
  • Terms and conditions
  • Login
Crown Copyright © 2025 | All Rights Reserved