Document details

Common medical and statistical problems

Author(s): Oliveira, M. Rosário ; Subtil, Ana ; Gonçalves, Luzia

Date: 2020

Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10362/116610

Origin: Repositório Institucional da UNL

Subject(s): Conditional probability; Coverage probability; Sample size; Sensitivity; Specificity; Applied Mathematics


Description

Sample size calculation in biomedical practice is typically based on the problematicWald method for a binomial proportion, with potentially dangerous consequences. This work highlights the need of incorporating the concept of conditional probability in sample size determination to avoid reduced sample sizes that lead to inadequate confidence intervals. Therefore, new definitions are proposed for coverage probability and expected length of confidence intervals for conditional probabilities, like sensitivity and specificity. The new definitions were used to assess seven confidence interval estimation methods. In order to determine the sample size, two procedures-an optimal one, based on the new definitions, and an approximation-were developed for each estimation method. Our findings confirm the similarity of the approximated sample sizes to the optimal ones. R code is provided to disseminate these methodological advances and translate them into biomedical practice.

Document Type Journal article
Language English
Contributor(s) Instituto de Higiene e Medicina Tropical (IHMT); Global Health and Tropical Medicine (GHTM); Population health, policies and services (PPS); RUN
facebook logo  linkedin logo  twitter logo 
mendeley logo

Related documents

No related documents