Potential Confounders in the Analysis of Brazilian Adolescent's Health: A Combination of Machine Learning and Graph Theory.

Journal: International journal of environmental research and public health
PMID:

Abstract

The prevalence of health problems during childhood and adolescence is high in developing countries such as Brazil. Social inequality, violence, and malnutrition have strong impact on youth health. To better understand these issues we propose to combine machine-learning methods and graph analysis to build predictive networks applied to the Brazilian National Student Health Survey (PenSE 2015) data, a large dataset that consists of questionnaires filled by the students. By using a combination of gradient boosting machines and centrality hub metric, it was possible to identify potential confounders to be considered when conducting association analyses among variables. The variables were ranked according to their hub centrality to predict the other variables from a directed weighted-graph perspective. The top five ranked confounder variables were "gender", "oral health care", "intended education level", and two variables associated with nutrition habits-"eat while watching TV" and "never eat fast-food". In conclusion, although causal effects cannot be inferred from the data, we believe that the proposed approach might be a useful tool to obtain novel insights on the association between variables and to identify general factors related to health conditions.

Authors

  • Amanda Yumi Ambriola Oku
    Center of Mathematics, Computing and Cognition-Universidade Federal do ABC, Santo André CEP 09210-580, Brazil.
  • Guilherme Augusto Zimeo Morais
    Big Data-Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein, São Paulo CEP 05652-900, Brazil.
  • Ana Paula Arantes Bueno
    Center of Mathematics, Computing and Cognition-Universidade Federal do ABC, Santo André CEP 09210-580, Brazil.
  • André Fujita
    Institute of Mathematics and Statistics-University of São Paulo, São Paulo CEP 05508-090, Brazil.
  • João Ricardo Sato
    Center of Mathematics, Computing and Cognition, Federal University of ABC, São Bernardo do Campo, Brazil; Graduate Program in Neuroscience and Cognition, Federal University of ABC, Santo André, Brazil. Electronic address: joao.sato@ufabc.edu.br.