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JAMAevidence JAMA Guide to Statistics and Methods Profile

JAMAevidence JAMA Guide to Statistics and Methods

English, Health / Medicine, 1 season, 32 episodes, 10 hours, 9 minutes
About
Interviews with authors of JAMA Guide to Statistics and Methods chapters about common and new statistics and methods used in clinical research and reported in medical journals.
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Genome-Wide Association Studies With Dr Rotter

Jerome I. Rotter, MD, The Institute for Translational Genomics and Population Sciences, Los Angeles Biomedical Research Institute, Department of Pediatrics, Harbor-UCLA Medical Center, discusses Genome-Wide Association Studies with JAMA Statistical Editor Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD. Related Content: Genome-Wide Association Studies
9/5/202423 minutes, 26 seconds
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Conditional Power: How Likely Is Trial Success?

Benjamin R. Saville, PhD, Department of Biostatistics, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, discusses Conditional Power: How Likely Is Trial Success? with JAMA Statistical Editor Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD. Related Content: Conditional Power
8/1/202416 minutes, 28 seconds
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Bayesian Hierarchical Models With Dr McGlothlin

Anna E. McGlothlin, PhD, Berry Consultants, LLC, discusses Bayesian Hierarchical Models with JAMA Statistical Editor Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD. Related Content: Bayesian Hierarchical Models
7/3/202415 minutes, 7 seconds
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Sequential, Multiple Assignment, Randomized Trial Designs With Dr Kidwell

Kelley Kidwell, PhD, professor of biostatistics, University of Michigan, discusses Sequential, Multiple Assignment, Randomized Trial Designs with JAMA Statistical Editor Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD. Related Content: Sequential, Multiple Assignment, Randomized Trial Designs
6/6/202413 minutes, 27 seconds
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Target Trial Emulation for Causal Inference From Observational Data With Dr Hernán

Miguel A. Hernán, MD, DrPH, professor of epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, discusses Target Trial Emulation: A Framework for Causal Inference From Observational Data with JAMA Statistical Editor Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD. Related Content: Target Trial Emulation
5/2/202427 minutes, 25 seconds
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On Deep Learning for Medical Image Analysis With Dr Carin

JAMA Statistical Editor Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD, discusses On Deep Learning for Medical Image Analysis with Lawrence Carin, PhD. Related Content: On Deep Learning for Medical Image Analysis
4/4/202422 minutes, 54 seconds
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Patient-Reported Outcome Measures in Clinical Research With Drs Weinfurt and Reeve

JAMA Statistical Editor Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD, discusses Patient-Reported Outcome Measures in Clinical Research with Kevin P. Weinfurt, PhD, and Bryce B. Reeve, PhD. Related Content: Patient-Reported Outcome Measures in Clinical Research
3/7/202422 minutes, 10 seconds
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Immortal Time Bias in Observational Studies With Dr Kabir Yadav

JAMA Statistical Editor Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD, discusses Immortal Time Bias in Observational Studies with Kabir Yadav, MDCM, MS, MSHS. Related Content: Immortal Time Bias in Observational Studies
1/4/202415 minutes, 6 seconds
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Adjustment for Baseline Characteristics in Randomized Clinical Trials

JAMA Statistical Editor Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD, discusses Adjustment for Baseline Characteristics in Randomized Clinical Trial with Lars W. Andersen, MD, MPH, PhD, DMSc. Related Content: Adjustment for Baseline Characteristics in Randomized Clinical Trials
12/7/202318 minutes, 15 seconds
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Odds Ratios—Current Best Practice and Use With Dr Norton

JAMA Statistical Editor Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD, discusses Odds Ratios—Current Best Practice and Use with Edward C. Norton, PhD. Related Content: Odds Ratios—Current Best Practice and Use Types and Distribution of Payments From Industry to Physicians in 2015
11/2/202312 minutes, 19 seconds
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Estimands, Estimators, and Estimates With Dr Little

Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD, discusses Estimands, Estimators, and Estimates with Roderick J. Little, PhD, in the JAMA Guide to Statistics and Methods series. Related Content: Estimands, Estimators, and Estimates
8/3/202322 minutes, 6 seconds
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Interpreting the Results of Intention-to-Treat, Per-Protocol, and As-Treated Analyses With Dr Smith

Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD, discusses Interpreting the Results of Intention-to-Treat, Per-Protocol, and As-Treated Analyses with Valerie A. Smith, DrPH. Related Content: Interpreting the Results of Intention-to-Treat, Per-Protocol, and As-Treated Analyses of Clinical Trials
5/4/202318 minutes, 25 seconds
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Time-to-Event Analysis With Dr Tolles

JAMA Statistical Editor Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD, discusses Time-to-Event Analysis with Juliana Tolles, MD, MHS. Related Content: Time-to-Event Analysis
3/3/202311 minutes, 19 seconds
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Adjusting for Nonadherence or Stopping Treatments With Drs Adler and Latimer

JAMA Statistical Editor Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD, discusses Adjusting for Nonadherence or Stopping Treatments with Amanda I. Adler, MD, PhD, and Nicholas Latimer, PhD. Related Content: Adjusting for Nonadherence or Stopping Treatments in Randomized Clinical Trials
1/5/202317 minutes, 58 seconds
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Worst-Rank Score Methods—A Nonparametric Approach to Informatively Missing Data With Dr Lachin

JAMA Statistical Editor Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD, discusses Worst-Rank Score Methods—A Nonparametric Approach to Informatively Missing Data with John M. Lachin, ScD. Related Content: Worst-Rank Score Methods—A Nonparametric Approach to Informatively Missing Data
11/3/202217 minutes, 6 seconds
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Using Latent Class Analysis to Identify Hidden Clinical Phenotypes With Dr Heather G. Allore

JAMA Statistical Editor Roger Lewis, MD, PhD, discusses Using Latent Class Analysis to Identify Hidden Clinical Phenotypes with Heather G. Allore, PhD. Related Content: Using Latent Class Analysis to Identify Hidden Clinical Phenotypes With Dr Heather G. Allore
9/1/202217 minutes, 34 seconds
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Use of Run-in Periods in Randomized Trials With Dr Armitage

JAMA Statistical Editor Roger Lewis, MD, PhD, discusses Use of Run-in Periods in Randomized Trials with Jane M. Armitage, MBBS. Related Content: Use of Run-in Periods in Randomized Trials With Dr Armitage Short- and Long-term Effects of a Mobile Phone App in Conjunction With Brief In-Person Counseling on Physical Activity Among Physically Inactive Women: The mPED Randomized Clinical Trial
5/5/202219 minutes, 29 seconds
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Regression Discontinuity Study Design to Estimate Observational Differences With Dr Maciejewski

JAMA Statistical Editor Roger Lewis, MD, discusses Regression Discontinuity Design with Matthew L. Maciejewski, PhD. Related Content: Regression Discontinuity Design Using Instrumental Variables to Address Bias From Unobserved Confounders
4/7/202217 minutes, 54 seconds
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Case-Control Studies: Using “Real-world” Evidence to Assess Association, With Dr Irony

JAMA Statistical Editor Roger Lewis, MD, discusses Case-Control Studies: Using “Real-world” Evidence to Assess Association, With Dr Irony.
12/2/202123 minutes, 7 seconds
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Equipoise in Research—Integrating Ethics and Science in Human Research

Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD, discusses Equipoise in Research—Integrating Ethics and Science in Human Research with Alex John London, PhD Related Content: Equipoise in Research—Integrating Ethics and Science in Human Research
10/7/202121 minutes, 48 seconds
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Bayesian Analysis: Using Prior Information to Interpret the Results of Clinical Trials

Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD, discusses Bayesian Analysis: Using Prior Information to Interpret the Results of Clinical Trials with Melanie Quintana, PhD Related Content: Bayesian Analysis: Using Prior Information to Interpret the Results of Clinical Trials Effect of Therapeutic Hypothermia Initiated After 6 Hours of Age on Death or Disability Among Newborns With Hypoxic-Ischemic Encephalopathy: A Randomized Clinical Trial Incorporating Adult Evidence Into Pediatric Research and Practice: Bayesian Designs to Expedite Obtaining Child-Specific Evidence
9/2/202127 minutes, 31 seconds
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Cost-effectiveness Analysis for Clinicians

Cost-effectiveness analysis defines trade-offs between costs, harms, and benefits of alternative treatments and combines them into a single metric, the incremental cost-effectiveness ratio (ICER), that can inform decisions about which interventions to recommend when limited resources are available. Gillian Sanders-Schmidler, PhD, professor of population health sciences and medicine at Duke University, explains the method in terms clinicians can understand. Related Article: Cost-effectiveness Analysis for Clinicians
8/5/202118 minutes, 21 seconds
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Multiple Comparison Procedures from the JAMA Guide to Statistics and Methods

JAMA Deputy Editor Edward Livingston, MD, discusses "Multiple Comparison Procedures" with Dr. Jing Cao, PhD
3/4/202122 minutes, 47 seconds
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Logistic Regression—What It Is and How to Use It in Clinical Research

Logistic regression is one of the most commonly used statistical analytic tools in the medical literature. William Meurer, MD, from the University of Michigan, and Juliana Tolles, MD, from UCLA, discuss a JAMA Guide to Statistics and Methods article they wrote entitled “Logistic Regression Diagnostics: Understanding How Well a Model Predicts Outcomes.” Related Article: Logistic Regression
1/7/202132 minutes, 47 seconds
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Randomization in Clinical Trials from the JAMA Guide to Statistics and Methods

Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD, discusses Randomization in Clinical Trials from the JAMA Guide to Statistics and Methods Related Article(s): Randomization in Clinical Trials
12/3/202023 minutes, 14 seconds
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The Stepped-Wedge Clinical Trial: Evaluation by Rolling Deployment

Cluster randomized trials are performed when an intervention must be delivered to a group of patients like when testing new nursing protocols on award or different means for cleaning beds on a ward. One type of cluster trials is called a stepped-wedge where every cluster in the study ultimately undergoes the intervention. How this works it is explained by Susan Ellenberg, PhD, from the Department of Biostatistics, Epidemiology, and Informatics at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. Related Article: The Stepped-Wedge Clinical Trial
9/3/202018 minutes, 7 seconds
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Minimal Clinically Important Difference: Defining What Really Matters to Patients

JAMA Deputy Editor Edward Livingston, MD, discusses Minimal Clinically Important Difference: Defining What Really Matters to Patients with Anna E. McGlothlin, PhD
8/6/202011 minutes, 43 seconds
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Sample Size Calculation for a Hypothesis Test With Dr Lynne Stokes

One of the most common causes for problems we see in manuscripts at JAMA is an inappropriately calculated study sample size. This seemingly mysterious process is explained by Lynne Stokes, PhD, professor of Statistical Science at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas.
7/2/202012 minutes, 14 seconds
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Pragmatic Trials: Practical Answers to “Real-world” Questions With Harold C. Sox, MD

JAMA Deputy Editor Edward Livingston, MD, discusses Pragmatic Trials: Practical Answers to “Real-world” Questions with Harold C. Sox, MD, of PCORI
6/25/202021 minutes, 14 seconds
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Cluster Randomized Trials: Evaluating Treatments Applied to Groups With William J. Meurer, MD

JAMA Deputy Editor Edward Livingston, MD, discusses "Cluster Randomized Trials: Evaluating Treatments Applied to Groups" with William J. Meurer, MD, MS
5/7/202023 minutes, 39 seconds
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Noninferiority Trials: Is a New Treatment Almost as Effective as Another? with Dr Amy Kaji

Ed Livingston, MD, FACS, AGAF, discusses Noninferiority Trials: Is a New Treatment Almost as Effective as Another? with Amy Kaji, MD, PhD
2/6/202010 minutes, 52 seconds
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JAMA Guide to Statistics and Methods

Clinical researchers and biostatisticians use highly specialized language to help them discuss statistics and research methods efficiently. In 2019 JAMA published the JAMA Guide to Statistics and Methods, a book of short reviews that translate that specialized language and explain statistics and methods to a broad physician readership. The book's editors and authors, Edward Livingston, MD, and Roger J. Lewis, MD, PhD, discuss their approach to choosing statistical topics and their objectives in compiling the reviews into book format.   Purchase the JAMA Guide to Statistics and Methods at: McGraw-Hill:                    ja.ma/StatsGuideMH Barnes and Noble:           ja.ma/StatsGuideBN Amazon:                            ja.ma/StatsGuideAmazon
12/5/201913 minutes, 43 seconds