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Age-period-cohort
analyses aim at linking the expected incidence rate Rij with the
effects of the age at death Ai (age effects), the death date Pj
(calendar period effects), and the birth date Ck (birth cohort
effects).
Each category
has the same time duration (e.g., 10 years). In this study however, an
observation period was incomplete (1990-97).
These effects
are considered to be multiplicative.
This is
illustrated by plotting the data on a logarithmic scale (Figure 1 in
Cohen CH. Am J Epidemiol 2000;152:474-9).
The age-specific
incidence is considered to be stable among calendar periods of
observation, and among birth cohorts.
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