Survival analysis : HR

51 views
Skip to first unread message

MANOJ KUMAR

unread,
Jan 22, 2024, 9:56:18 PMJan 22
to meds...@googlegroups.com

Dear All, 

I would like to discuss the adjusted and unadjusted hazards ratios interpretation and significance in univariate / multistage/multivariate survival analysis.


First question: adjusted and unadjusted HR --when to calculate and when to report 

second question: If p-values are non-significant and HR >1 then interpretations..

 

Thanks,

Dr. Manoj

University of Pittsburgh


--
Best Regards,
Dr. Manoj Kumar Diwakar, M.Sc., M.Phil.,Ph.D. (Statistics)
Assistant Professor
Centre for Economic Studies & Planning (CESP), School of Social Sciences (SSS-II),
Jawaharlal Nehru University, 
New Delhi-110067, India. 
Email id: manojkumar@jnu.ac.in 
 Mobile-09990346151
Area of Specialisation: Statistics, Econometric and Applied Mathematics 
Research Methodology -Quantitative Methods, Health Economics, Clinical Trial-Biostatistics
Data analysis and Software: SAS, SPSS, R, STATA, SPSS AMOS

Simon, Stephen D.

unread,
Jan 23, 2024, 1:23:06 PMJan 23
to meds...@googlegroups.com
On 1/22/2024 8:56 PM, MANOJ KUMAR wrote:

> I would like to discuss the adjusted and unadjusted hazards ratios interpretation
> and significance in univariate / multistage/multivariate survival analysis.
> First question: adjusted and unadjusted HR --when to calculate and when to report
> second question: If p-values are non-significant and HR >1 then interpretations..

Anyone who writes about any statistics in any journal should have Lang and Secic, How to Report Statistics in Medicine, on their bookshelf. For Dr. Kumar, please note that an entire chapter is devoted to time-to-event models.


Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages