• ABSTRACT
    • Cohort studies evaluate the relationship between exposure to a specific event or phenomenon and the occurrence of an associated out-come of interest (or lack thereof). This methodological design has been widely used in certain areas of medicine, such as the study of cardiovascular risk factors and the effects of ionizing radiation in humans. It is a useful study design, especially for research involving low-occurrence exposures, because it can be easily adapted to various contexts. This article, which provides an overview of observational cohort studies, is part of a methodology series on general concepts in biostatistics and clinical epidemiology developed by the Chair of Scientific Research Methodology at the University of Valparaísos School of Medicine in Chile. It describes historical, practical, and theoretical concepts related to cohort studies; essential elements in cohort study design, and variations and derivations of it; potential types and sources of bias in these types of observational/longitudinal studies, and various methods researchers can use to address/minimize them.