What are the characteristics of the question used to test the hypothesis
PICOT
Patients or Population Intervention(s) or Exposure(s) Comparator Outcome Time
What are the 5 fundamental types of clinical questions
Summarise and classify the different types of study designs
EXPERIMENTAL
OBSERVATIONAL
What type of studies are the lowest level of evidence and what are these studies used for. What are its advantages and disadvantages
Animal studies
ADV
DISADV
Distinguish
What are cross-over trials?
Each patient acts as their own control
Patients ‘cross-over’ from one treatment to the next following a ‘washout period’ between treatments
There is usually randomization
What are self controlled studies
Each patient is their own control
Post treatment measurements in each patient are compared to pre-treatment measurements
With regards to data collection (sampling), What two principles are paramount
Describe and define 4 sampling strategies
What does randomisation mean
A representative sample can be chosen by RANDOM sampling, whereby each person is equally likely to be selected.
It means that no systematic bias is introduced and the samples selected should be representative of the populations of interest
What is the CONSORT or STROBE diagram
STROBE - STrengthening the Reporting of OBservational studies in Epidemiology
CONSORT - CONsolidated Standards of Reporting Trials
Figure 1 in any published study –> total number of patients eligible vs total number of patients included. If number included is low vs number eligible then this is strongly suspicious that the subset is biased , either through who is in the study, or who declined to participate
What is sampling error
If a study is repeated different sample chosen with slightly different characteristics and as such the result will differ slightly.
Sampling error becomes smaller as the sample size increases
What is the difference between a parameter and a statistic
A parameter refers to a property of a population
A statistic refers to a property of a sample
What are the conventional symbols for the mean and standard deviation of a population vs a sample
Population
Sample
What is a histogram. List and describes the 3 main shapes of this entity
This is a graph that gives an indication of the distribution of data.
On what types of data can parametric tests be used
Normally distributed data
(This includes log transformed right skewed data –> Gaussian)
Unfortunately, Left skewed data cannot be transformed easily.
What is the purpose of a histogram
To show the frequency and shape of continuous data.
Determining whether the data is normally distributed (or can be transformed to normality) allows for the use of parametric tests in data analysis.
Shows:
What is the kurtosis of the data
This refers to the flat or pointed nature of the distribution of the data
How do you calculate a 95% confidence interval and why is this necessary
95% CI = Mean ± 2SD
Used to determine if the data presented is plausible
What is the indication for a Box and Whisker Plot
To graphically represent the median and interquartile range in non-normally distributed data.
Describe the data organisation of a box and whisker plot
Median - thick horizontal line within the box
Length of box represents the interquartile range (25% –> 75%)
Whiskers represent range
Outliers shown when they are more than 3 box lengths from the upper or lower end of the box
What is the most common transformation of non-normally distributed data?
Log transformation of positively skewed (right skewed) data. Creates a normal distribution curve for which parametric tests during data analysis.
What is the purpose of scatterplots
To provide a visual representation of the relationship between two variables
What is the indication to use a scatterplot
To understand the nature of the relationship between two continuous variables