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mice (version 2.2)

tbc: Terneuzen birth cohort

Description

Data of subset of the Terneuzen Birth Cohort data on child growth.

Arguments

source

De Kroon, M. L. A., Renders, C. M., Kuipers, E. C., van Wouwe, J. P., van Buuren, S., de Jonge, G. A., Hirasing, R. A. (2008). Identifying metabolic syndrome without blood tests in young adults - The Terneuzen birth cohort. European Journal of Public Health, 18(6), 656-660.

De Kroon, M. L. A., Renders, C. M., Van Wouwe, J. P., Van Buuren, S., Hirasing, R. A. (2010). The Terneuzen birth cohort: BMI changes between 2 and 6 years correlate strongest with adult overweight. PLoS ONE, 5(2), e9155.

De Kroon, M. L. A. (2011). The Terneuzen Birth Cohort. Detection and Prevention of Overweight and Cardiometabolic Risk from Infancy Onward. Disseration, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam. http://dare.ubvu.vu.nl/handle/1871/23806

Van Buuren, S. (2012). Flexible Imputation of Missing Data. Boca Raton, FL: Chapman & Hall/CRC Press.

Details

This tbc data set is a random subset of persons from a much larger collection of data from the Terneuzen Birth Cohort. The total cohort comprises of 2604 unique persons, whereas the subset in tbc covers 306 persons. The tbc.target is an auxiliary data set containing two outcomes at adult age. For more details, see De Kroon et al (2008, 2010, 2011). The imputation methodology is explained in Chapter 9 of Van Buuren (2012).

Examples

Run this code
data <- tbc
md.pattern(data)

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