Key Stats In Evidence Based Medicine Flashcards
Define incidence
Measure the number of new cases of a particular disease arising in a population at risk in a certain time period
Define prevalence
All cases of disease existing in a given population at a given time
A proportion
What is the risk ratio/relative risk?
Ratio of risk in group A vs risk in group B
RR = Rexposed / Runexposed
What is the odds ratio?
Ratio of odds of outcome in group A vs odds of outcome in group B
OR = odds of outcomeexposed / odds of outcomeunexposed
How do you calculate the risk ratio?
Riskexposed / Riskunexposed
- group of 200 > split into 2 groups of 100
- group A: 100 > 25 die (75 survive)
- group B: 100 > 10 die (90 survive)
- group A risk: 25/100 > 0.25
- group B risk: 10/100 >0.1
- 0.25/0.1 > 2.5
- RR = 2.5
How do you calculate odds ratio?
odds of outcomeexposed / odds of outcomeunexposed
- group of 200 > split into 2 groups of 100
- group A: 100 > 25 die (75 survive)
- group B: 100 > 10 die (90 survive)
- group A odds: 25 : 75 > 1 : 3
- group B odds: 10 : 90 > 1 : 90
- 0.333/0.111 > 3
- OR = 3
What is the absolute risk?
The risk of acquiring a given disease over a given period of time
What is the absolute risk difference?
Absolute risk in exposed group - absolute risk in unexposed group
Relationship between the p value + null hypothesis
- the smaller the p value, the stronger the evidence against the null hypothesis
- the larger the p value, the weaker the evidence against the null hypothesis
Issues with the p value
- gives no indication as to the size of the effect
- no idea to the range of uncertainty
- if there is bias within the study, you can still get a low p value
What is a confidence interval?
Gives a range of values in which you are reasonably confident that the true values
What has to occur for something to be statistically significant in confidence intervals?
Range doesn’t cross 1
What has to occur for something to be statistically significant in absolute difference?
Range spans 0