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Communicating Statistics What is the message? Philip Sedgwick St. George’s, University of London Burwalls: King’s College London. UK Annual Meeting for Teachers of Medical Statistics, July 1 st to 3 rd 2015.
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Burwalls 1 st to 3 rd July 2015 Introduction Teaching statistics: Use of words? Impact on message? Expectations in application. From research setting to…. ….Patients and public. Current teaching examples.
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Burwalls 1 st to 3 rd July 2015 My Background Teaching medical statistics: Thirty years. MBBS, MRes. & MSc. students. MBBS: School Leavers and Graduate Entry.
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Kaplan-Meier Survival Curves Aim: Evaluate effectiveness integrated care programme for patients with chronic low back pain. Design: Randomised controlled trial. Intervention (I): Combined patient-directed and workplace-directed intervention; one year follow-up. Control (C): Usual care. Participants: 134 adults (18-65), sick listed ≥ 12 wks due to low back pain. Outcome: Full sustained return to work. Survival times: Time until outcome. 4 (BMJ 2010;340:c1035) Burwalls 1 st to 3 rd July 2015
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Median duration: Intervention: 88 days; Control: 208 days. One year estimates (approximate): Intervention: 75%; Control: 65%. Log Rank Test: P=0.003 Hazard Ratio (HR) = 1.9; 95% Cl 1.2 to 2.8; P=0.004 Intervention: Significantly shorter times than control. Key Points: Teaching Burwalls 1 st to 3 rd July 2015
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Patient experience? Describe benefits treatment (median duration)? May not benefit from intervention? Enhanced recovery with control? May not return to work. Nonetheless - Message is: Intervention: Significantly shorter times than control. Application Burwalls 1 st to 3 rd July 2015
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Statistics: Culture of significance and superiority. Group experience: P-values & 95% CI. Conflict between “evidence” and pragmatism. What is the message? Teacher to Student? Student (Doctor) to Patient? Challenges Burwalls 1 st to 3 rd July 2015
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Words Confuse? Statistical Significance P < 0.05; 95% CI (Based on same theory). Significance: Everyday meaning = Importance. Statistics: Does not equate to importance. Group experience: Relevance to population. Burwalls 1 st to 3 rd July 2015
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The death of the P-value: What a chance!? Journal of Basic and Applied Social Psychology. Ban on hypothesis testing. Burwalls 1 st to 3 rd July 2015 Ban on significance versus ban on P-value.
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What is Chance? Statistics: Synonymous with risk. Chance: Noun, adjective or verb. Culturally loaded society. “Words matter and confuse”. Teacher, student & patient. Banned. Odds, bias, error, confidence, qualitative expressions of risk, Burwalls 1 st to 3 rd July 2015 A Choice of Words
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CASI Cork 11 th to 13 th May 2015 Concluding Thoughts Teaching Curriculum: Modern needs; Teaching is about relevance, not just facts; People are not statistics. Culturally loaded society. “Words matter and confuse”. Use your words wisely!
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CASI Cork 11 th to 13 th May 2015 © Swiss Statistical Society
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