Update
The Oxford Biblical Studies Online and Oxford Islamic Studies Online have retired. Content you previously purchased on Oxford Biblical Studies Online or Oxford Islamic Studies Online has now moved to Oxford Reference, Oxford Handbooks Online, Oxford Scholarship Online, or What Everyone Needs to Know®. For information on how to continue to view articles visit the subscriber services page.
Dismiss

Related Content

More Like This

Show all results sharing these subjects:

  • Medicine and health
  • Dentistry

GO

Show Summary Details

Overview

Bradford Hill criteria


Quick Reference

[A. B. Hill (1897–1991), British medical statistician] A set of nine criteria used to determine the strength of an association between a disease and its supposed causative agent. They form the basis of modern medical and dental epidemiological research.

The nine Bradford Hill criteria

Criterion

Explanation

Strength of association

The stronger the association, the more likely it is that the relation is causal.

Temporal relationship

Exposure always precedes the outcome.

Consistency

The association is consistent when results are replicated with different people under different circumstances and with different measurement instruments.

Theoretical plausibility

It is easier to accept an association as causal when there is a rational and theoretical basis for such a conclusion.

Coherence

The association should be compatible with existing theory, hypotheses, and knowledge.

Specificity

In the ideal situation, the effect has only one cause.

Dose response relationship

An increasing amount of exposure increases the risk.

Experimental evidence

Any related research that is based on experiments will make a causal inference more plausible.

Analogy

Sometimes a commonly accepted phenomenon in one area can be applied to another area.


Reference entries