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Index
Cover
Contents
Dedication
Title Page
Copyright
Contributors
Source of contents
Introduction
Part I: Estimation and Confidence Intervals
1 Estimating with confidence
2 Confidence intervals in practice
Surveys of the use of confidence intervals in medical journals
Misuse of confidence intervals
Dissenting voices
Comment
3 Confidence intervals rather than P values
Summary
Introduction
Presentation of study results: limitations of P values
Presentation of study results: confidence intervals
Sample sizes and confidence intervals
Confidence intervals and statistical significance
Suggested mode of presentation
Conclusion
Appendix 1: Standard deviation and standard error
Appendix 2: Constructing confidence intervals
4 Means and their differences
Single sample
Two samples: unpaired case
Two samples: paired case
Non-Normal data
Comment
5 Medians and their differences
Medians and other quantiles
Differences between medians
Comment
Technical note
6 Proportions and their differences
Single sample
Two samples: unpaired case
Two samples: paired case
When no events are observed
Software
Technical note
7 Epidemiological studies
Relative risks, attributable risks and odds ratios
Incidence rates, standardised ratios and rates
Comment
8 Regression and correlation
Linear regression analysis
Binary outcome variable—logistic regression
Outcome is time to an event—Cox regression
Several explanatory variables—multiple regression
Correlation analysis
Technical details: formulae for regression and correlation analyses
9 Time to event studies
Survival proportions
Median survival time Single sample
The hazard ratio
Cox regression
10 Diagnostic tests
Classification into two groups
Classification into more than two groups
Diagnostic tests based on measurements
Comparison of assessors—the kappa statistic
11 Clinical trials and meta-analyses
Randomised controlled trials
Meta-analysis
Software
Comment
12 Confidence intervals and sample sizes
Confidence intervals and P values
Sample size and hypothesis tests
Sample size and confidence intervals
Confidence intervals and null values
Confidence intervals, power and worthwhile differences
Explanation of the anomaly
Proposed solutions
Confidence intervals and standard sample size tables
Conclusion
Appendix
Sample size for comparison of two independent means
Sample size for comparison of two independent proportions
13 Special topics
The substitution method
Exact and mid-P confidence intervals
Bootstrap confidence intervals
Multiple comparisons
Part II: Statistical Guidelines and Checklists
14 Statistical guidelines for contributors to medical journals
Introduction
Methods section
Results section: statistical analysis
Results section: presentation of results
Discussion section: interpretation
Concluding remarks
15 Statistical checklists
Introduction
Uses of the checklists
Outline of the BMJ checklists
Reporting randomised controlled trials: the CONSORT statement
Checklists for other types of study
Part III: Notation, Software, and Tables
16 Notation
17 Computer software for calculating confidence intervals (CIA)
Outline of the CIA program
Software updates and bug fixes
18 Tables for the calculation of confidence intervals
Index
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