User:Psarka/What a mess!
This is a page to store the notes on the effort to resolve the mess of epidemiology notation and terminology.
Main references
[edit]SMM: Statistical methods in medical research (4 ed.) 20K gs citations
DoE: A Dictionary of Epidemiology (6 ed.) 6K gs citations
EBtB: Epidemiology: Beyond the Basics (4 ed.) 2K gs citations
EAI: Epidemiology: An Introduction (2 ed.) 2K gs citations
Affected pages
[edit]shorthand | notation | Template:Medical research studies | synonyms | example | issues | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ARR | Epidemiology/methods: association: absolute | DoE, EAI, text: (negative) risk difference
DoE, text: (dual) absolute risk increase text: (negative) excess risk
|
RCT risk reduction RCT risk increase |
| ||
Relative risk reduction | RRR | , EER | Epidemiology/methods:
association: relative |
EBtB, text: efficacy
EAI, text: relative effect DoE, text: (dual) relative risk increase |
RCT risk reduction RCT risk increase |
|
Number needed to treat | NNT | Epidemiology/methods:
association: absolute |
- |
| ||
Number needed to harm | NNH | , EER |
Epidemiology/methods
association:absolute |
- | RCT risk reduction |
|
RR | Epidemiology/methods: association: relative | text: relative risk | RCT risk reduction |
| ||
Odds ratio | OR | , p1, X, n11, | Epidemiology/methods: association: relative | RCT risk reduction |
too much for me, I give up on this one | |
Attributable risk | - | text: excess risk | - |
| ||
Attributable fraction among the exposed | AFe | Epidemiology/methods: association: absolute | text: Attributable risk percent among exposed
text: Attributable fraction among the exposed text: Attributable proportion among the exposed text: Relative attributable risk text: Attributable risk among the exposed |
RCT risk reduction |
| |
Attributable fraction for the population | AFp | , , | Epidemiology/methods: association: absolute | text: Attributable proportion for the population
text: Population attributable proportion text: Levin's attributable risk text: Population attributable risk text: Population attributable fraction |
- |
|
PFu | Epidemiology/methods: association: absolute | - | RCT risk reduction |
| ||
Preventable fraction for the population | PFp | Epidemiology/methods: association: absolute | - | - | ||
Hazard ratio | HR | , , | - | - | ||
Rate ratio | - | - | text: Incidence density ratio | - |
| |
- | - | - |
| |||
Experimental event rate | EER | |||||
Absolute risk | AR |
Things to fix
[edit]Notation
[edit]Harmonize the notation, if possible staying close to dictionary of epidemiology (DoE):
Notation of the dictionary of the epidemiology:
- incidence rate among the exposed
- incidence rate among the unexposed
- incidence rate in the population
etc.
Terminology
[edit]Remove ambiguous terms and align with the dictionary of epidemiology:
Attributable risk percent -> Attributable fraction among the exposed
Deprecate Attributable risk. Quote:
"attributable risk (Syn: causal risk difference) The risk of the outcome had everybody
in the population been exposed minus the risk of the outcome had everybody in the
population remained unexposed. [...] Unfortunately,
this term and attributable rate have been used to denote a number of different
concepts, including the attributable fraction for the population, the attributable
fraction among the exposed, and the rate difference."
Template
[edit]Name of the category Epidemiology/methods of the Template:Medical research studies is not ideal, and further subdivisions to "occurrence", "association:absolute", "association:relative", "other" is not adding much clarity.
It needs to be sorted out.
The general terms found in pages are:
epidemiological measuremeasurestatistical ratioway to quantify
A good candidate from the dictionary of the Epidemiology is:
"effect measure A quantity that measures the effect of a factor on the frequency or risk of
a health outcome or effect. Such measures include the attributable fraction, which
measure the fraction of cases due to a factor; risk differences and rate differences,
which measure the amount a factor adds to the risk or rate of a disease; and risk
ratios, odds ratios, and rate ratios, which measure the amount by which a factor
multiplies the risk, odds, or rate of disease. The identification of these quantities with
effect measures presumes that there is no bias in the quantity."
Worked example
[edit]The "ARR RRR worksheet" focuses on control vs target group, while in epidemiology I find exposed vs unexposed more frequently.
Also, target vs control does not allow for discussion about the population.
Also, the positive effect - negative effect distinction is slightly too heavy on the understandability.
Also, some formulas do not match the literature
Random notes
[edit]What is this ?!
Related pages
- Incidence (epidemiology)
- Infection rate (duplicate of the above???)
- Prevalence