Statistics without Tears: An Introduction for Non-Mathematicians

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Statistics without Tears: An Introduction for Non-Mathematicians

Statistics without Tears: An Introduction for Non-Mathematicians

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If cases of a disease are being ascertained through their attendance at a hospital outpatient department (OPD), rather than by field surveys in the community, it will be necessary to define the population according to the so-called catchment area of the hospital OPD. For administrative purposes, a dispensary, health center or hospital is usually considered to serve a population within a defined geographic area. But these catchment areas may only represent in a crude manner with the actual use of medical facilities by the local people. For example, in OPD study of psychiatric illnesses in a particular hospital with a defined catchment area, many people with psychiatric illnesses may not visit the particular OPD and may seek treatment from traditional healers or religious leaders.

Statistics Without Tears: An Introduction for Non-Mathematicians Statistics Without Tears: An Introduction for Non-Mathematicians

Sometimes, a strictly random sample may be difficult to obtain and it may be more feasible to draw the required number of subjects in a series of stages. For example, suppose we wish to estimate the number of CATSCAN examinations made of all patients entering a hospital in a given month in the state of Maharashtra. It would be quite tedious to devise a scheme which would allow the total population of patients to be directly sampled. However, it would be easier to list the districts of the state of Maharashtra and randomly draw a sample of these districts. Within this sample of districts, all the hospitals would then be listed by name, and a random sample of these can be drawn. Within each of these hospitals, a sample of the patients entering in the given month could be chosen randomly for observation and recording. Thus, by stages, we draw the required sample. If indicated, we can introduce some element of stratification at some stage (urban/rural, gender, age). Essentially, the book covers all the statistics in A Level Maths (and bits of Further Stats), explaining it in an accessible way and actively encourages you to think (so there really is no escape). The hatred of crunching numbers and learning methods without understanding what I was doing has now been rectified.I'm not sure, whether this book is great, or it is just the cumulative result of many months of studying, but after reading it, I finally got the grasp on many basic things in statistics. There is the third option - I'm just too silly for statistics. have a stats test tomorrow, revising the concepts actually made sense.. very grateful but we will see how it goes The study population is the subset of the target population available for study (e.g. schizophrenics in the researcher's town).

Statistics Without Tears A Primer For Non Mathematicians ( 1981) Statistics Without Tears A Primer For Non Mathematicians ( 1981)

A sample is any part of the fully defined population. A syringe full of blood drawn from the vein of a patient is a sample of all the blood in the patient's circulation at the moment. Similarly, 100 patients of schizophrenia in a clinical study is a sample of the population of schizophrenics, provided the sample is properly chosen and the inclusion and exclusion criteria are well defined. To save this article to your Google Drive account, please select one or more formats and confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you used this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your Google Drive account.

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Clinical and demographic characteristics define the target population, the large set of people in the world to which the results of the study will be generalized (e.g. all schizophrenics). This is an excellent introduction to statistical thinking. The language used is conversational and easy to understand as you are guided through examples and ways of thinking about statistics. So why read this book? Because the undergrads I taught this term, and probably the postgrads I’ll teach next term, appear petrified and confused by quantitative methods. It’s so difficult to tell whether students are really grasping the concepts you explain in lectures, particularly when there’s no exam to test comprehension. These are social science students and their prior exposure to stats seems to have been minimal. When I spotted this book in library, I wondered if it could help me to explain the basics more clearly. And I think it just might. I found it very easy to follow and a helpful reminder. Rowntree’s explanation of the difference between parametric and non-parametric tests is especially lucid and useful. That said, I doubt I'll have time to include such careful and painstaking explanations in my lectures. I’ll definitely recommend the book to students, though. It’s not at all fashionable to suggest students read entire books, but honestly I think this one is much better than an explanatory video, the more trendy teaching medium. Research workers in the early 19th century endeavored to survey entire populations. This feat was tedious, and the research work suffered accordingly. Current researchers work only with a small portion of the whole population (a sample) from which they draw inferences about the population from which the sample was drawn.

Statistics without Tears: An Introduction for Non-Mathematicians Statistics without Tears: An Introduction for Non-Mathematicians

To save this article to your Dropbox account, please select one or more formats and confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you used this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your Dropbox account. Depending on the type of exposure being studied, there may or may not be a range of choice of cohort populations exposed to it who may form a larger population from which one has to select a study sample. For instance, if one is exploring association between occupational hazard such as job stress in health care workers in intensive care units (ICUs) and subsequent development of drug addiction, one has to, by the very nature of the research question, select health care workers working in ICUs. On the other hand, cause effect study for association between head injury and epilepsy offers a much wider range of possible cohorts. A sample may be defined as random if every individual in the population being sampled has an equal likelihood of being included. Random sampling is the basis of all good sampling techniques and disallows any method of selection based on volunteering or the choice of groups of people known to be cooperative.[ 3]That being said there were some good tidbits of information on misuse of statistics by third parties to strengthen their cause. Biases in marketing is a topic that interests me since I am obviously a consumer myself. As a library, NLM provides access to scientific literature. Inclusion in an NLM database does not imply endorsement of, or agreement with, Catchment areas depend on the demography of the area and the accessibility of the health center or hospital. Accessibility has three dimensions – physical, economic and social.[ 2] Physical accessibility is the time required to travel to the health center or medical facility. It depends on the topography of the area (e.g. hill and tribal areas with poor roads have problems of physical accessibility). Economic accessibility is the paying capacity of the people for services. Poverty may limit health seeking behavior if the person cannot afford the bus fare to the health center even if the health services may be free of charge. It may also involve absence from work which, for daily wage earners, is a major economic disincentive. Social factors such as caste, culture, language, etc. may adversely affect accessibility to health facility if the treating physician is not conversant with the local language and customs. In such situations, the patient may feel more comfortable with traditional healers.

Statistics without Tears! - BOPA Statistics without Tears! - BOPA

Rowntree makes statistics more “human” by shedding away complicated statistical formulae and replacing them with robust conversations. He explores the concepts that these formulae describe, pausing throughout the book to ask questions that force you to think. This give-and-take approach made the book feel conversational, a momentous accomplishment in statistics in my view.Please list any fees and grants from, employment by, consultancy for, shared ownership in or any close relationship with, at any time over the preceding 36 months, any organisation whose interests may be affected by the publication of the response. Please also list any non-financial associations or interests (personal, professional, political, institutional, religious or other) that a reasonable reader would want to know about in relation to the submitted work. This pertains to all the authors of the piece, their spouses or partners. Eh, it was ok. I'm not sure why these books seem to be so against updating to show use cases with current computational software (R, Python,...even...ugh, Excel), but they do seem to cavil at the idea of it. That would be fine, as I read this book looking for any little intuitions that I may have missed about some basic topics, but unfortunately, both the intuitions and the theoretical portions felt half finished. If you're looking for a refresher on statistics that helps with intuitions, I would definitely go with Head First Statistics over this one. Regardless, this should be the first book anyone should read if they want an introduction to the world of statistics. It contains no calculations and it is very engaging. In retrospect, these appear to be mistakes. As an aspiring trader, my world is deeply tied to statistics and programming languages (although I still think “R” is ugly). Reading “Statistics Without Tears” slowly chipped away at my prejudice toward the subject. Derek Rowntree writes and educates in a way that I believe most statistics teachers can only dream of doing. Instead of dosing off during the book’s “lectures,” like I did in university ones (on the ones I didn’t skip), this book had me hooked from beginning to end.



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