TY - JOUR T1 - Glossary: causality in public health science JF - Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health JO - J Epidemiol Community Health SP - 376 LP - 378 DO - 10.1136/jech.55.6.376 VL - 55 IS - 6 AU - M Susser Y1 - 2001/06/01 UR - http://jech.bmj.com/content/55/6/376.abstract N2 - Association is one of three properties of cause described by Hume.1 (See Properties). Association of any presumed cause with its presumed effect is judged statistically by the presence and strength of probabilities based on preset expectations of variation (so called chance occurrence). In epidemiology, other criteria such as consistency upon replication are also important. With the exception of antagonistic causes acting simultaneously, as in feed back systems, absence of association refutes causality. Causal inference is the thought process that tests whether a relation of cause to effect exists. An extensive philosophical literature considers the questions involved,1-8 as does a more recent epidemiological literature.9-22 Causality describes the property of being causal, the presence of cause, or ideas about the nature of the relations of cause and effect. Causation means either the production of an effect, or else the relation of cause to effect. Causes produce or occasion an effect. Some philosophers, and epidemiologists drawing largely on experimental sciences, require that causes be limited to well specified and active agents producing change. As by definition public health sciences entail an obligation to population health, among causes they must needs include contextual factors such as the more or less steady state conditions of sex or social position or climate or location, which can seldom be structured experimentally to produce change. Confounding occurs where an apparent association between a presumed causal variable and an outcome is in fact accounted for by a third variable, or “common cause” not in the postulated causal pathway; such a variable must be itself associated with both presumed cause and outcome. Connection is one of three essential properties of cause specified by Hume1 and, being the most difficult to establish, is also the most crucial (see Direction, a synonym, for definition). Counterfactual logic 19 limits … ER -