Association of longitudinal pet ownership with wheezing in 3-year-old children using the distributed lag model: the Japan Environment and Children’s Study
Kota Shirato, Koji Oba, Yutaka Matsuyama, Yasuhiro Hagiwara

TL;DR
This study finds that pet ownership during the first six months of life may increase wheezing in children by age three, using a new statistical model.
Contribution
A simple Distributed Lag Model (DLM) is proposed to improve estimation of critical windows for binary, time-varying exposures like pet ownership.
Findings
DLM showed lower bias and mean squared error compared to other models in estimating exposure effects.
Pet ownership between 0 and 6 months was linked to increased wheezing at age 3, with highest odds between 2 and 5 months.
Abstract
Time-varying exposures like pet ownership pose challenges for identifying critical windows due to multicollinearity when modeled simultaneously. The Distributed Lag Model (DLM) estimates critical windows for time-varying exposures, which are mainly continuous variables. However, applying complex functions such as high-order splines and nonlinear functions within DLMs may not be suitable for situations with limited time points or binary exposure, such as in questionnaire surveys. (1) We examined the estimation performance of a simple DLM with fractional polynomial function for time-varying binary exposures through simulation experiments. (2) We evaluated the impact of pet ownership on childhood wheezing onset and estimate critical windows. (1) We compared logistic regression including time-varying exposure in separate models, in one model simultaneously, and using DLM. For evaluation,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNoise Effects and Management · Asthma and respiratory diseases · Air Quality and Health Impacts
