2. Objectives
Identify the different types of tests of significance
and the indications of which with relevance to the
type of variables and descriptive statistics
provided
Acquiring the basic knowledge of biostatistics
necessary for them to understand and
comprehend medical literature and evidencebased medicine, follow up with the expanding
medical knowledge and participate in research.
Identify the role of biostatistics in medical
research
2
3. 3
Confidence Intervals
How much uncertainty is associated with
a point estimate of a population
parameter?
An interval estimate provides more
information about a population
characteristic than does a point estimate
Such interval estimates are called
confidence intervals
4. Point and Interval
Estimates
4
A point estimate is a single number,
a confidence interval provides additional
information about variability
Lower
Confidence
Limit
Point Estimate
Width of
confidence interval
Upper
Confidence
Limit
5. 5
Point Estimates
We can estimate a
Population Parameter …
with a Sample
Statistic
(a Point Estimate)
Mean
μ
x
Proportion
p
p
6. Confidence Interval
Estimate
An interval gives a range of values:
Takes
into consideration variation in
sample statistics from sample to
sample
Based
on observation from 1 sample
Gives
information about closeness to
unknown population parameters
Stated
in terms of level of confidence
Never
100% sure
8. Confidence interval
endpoints
Upper and lower confidence limits for the
population proportion are calculated with the
formula
p z /2
p(1 p)
n
where
z is the standard normal value for the level of confidence desired
p is the sample proportion
n is the sample size
9. Example
A random sample of 100 people shows that 25 are left-handed.
Form a 95% confidence interval for the true proportion of left-handers
10. Example
A random sample of 100 people shows that 25 are lefthanded. Form a 95% confidence interval for the true
proportion of left-handers.
.25
1. p 25/100
2. S
p
3.
p p
(1 )/n .25(.75)/n
.0433
.251.96
(.0433)
0.16510.3349
.....
11. Interpretation
We are 95% confident that the true percentage of lefthanders in the population is between
16.51% and 33.49%.
Although this range may or may not contain the true
proportion, 95% of intervals formed from samples of size
100 in this manner will contain the true proportion.
12. Changing the sample size
Increases in the sample size reduce the width of the confidence
interval.
Example:
If the sample size in the above example is doubled to 200,
and if 50 are left-handed in the sample, then the interval
is still centered at .25, but the width shrinks to
.19 …… .31
13. 95% CI for Mean
μ+
1.96 * SE
SE=
SD²/n
SE difference =
SD²/n1 + SD²/n2
13
14. CI for Odds Ratio
14
CASES
Appendicitis
Surgical ( Not
appendicitis)
Females
73(a)
363(b)
Males
47(c )
277(d)
Total
120
640
OR = ad/bc
95% CI OR = log OR + 1.96 * SE (Log OR)
15. CI for OR
SE ( loge OR) = 1/a + 1/b + 1/c + 1/d
= 1/73 + 1/363 + 1/47 + 1/277 = 0.203
Loge of the Odds Ratio is 0.170.
95% CI = 0.170 – 1.96 * 0.203 to 0.170 * 1.96 * 0.203
15
Loge OR = -0.228 to 0.578
Now by taking antilog ex we get 0.80 to 1.77 for 0.228 and
0.578 respectively.
16. CI for Relative Risk
16
Dead
Alive
Total
Placebo
21
110
131
Isoniazid
11
121
132
17. CI for Relative Risk
SE ( LogRR) =
1/a – 1/a+b + 1/c – 1/c+d
SE (LogRR) = 1/21-1/131 + 1/11 – 1/132 = 0.351
RR = a/ a+b / c/ c+d = 0.52
LogRR = Log 0.52 = - 0.654
95% CI = -0.654 -1.96 * 0.351 , -0.654 +1.96 * 0.351
= -1.42, 0.040 so by taking anti log we have
95% CI = 0.242, 1.04
17
18. Difference between reference range and
Confidence Interval
18
Reference range refers to individuals in a sample or
population while CI refers to estimates rather than
the individuals in a sample or population.
This is exactly like SD & SE relationship.
19. 19
Value of CI,s
68% CI – 1.68
1 SD
95% CI – 1.96
2 SD
99% CI – 2.58
3 SD
About 68.27% of the values lie within one
standard deviation of the mean.
Similarly, about 95.45% of the values lie within two
standard deviations of the mean.
Nearly all (99.73%) of the values lie within three
standard deviations of the mean.
20. CI & SD Graphical Description
20
Dark blue is less than one standard deviation from the mean. For the normal
distribution, this accounts for 68.27% of the set; while two standard
deviations from the mean (medium and dark blue) account for 95.45%; and
three standard deviations (light, medium, and dark blue) account for 99.73%.