Comparative Effectiveness at work (and a power dig)
A faithful reader of the blog thought I might feel better if I focused on some actual clinical trials. He’s right. From JAMA, “Association of
A faithful reader of the blog thought I might feel better if I focused on some actual clinical trials. He’s right. From JAMA, “Association of
There’s been some chatter about how the Oregon Medicaid study is or might be biased. That’s worth a post! There’s a precise way in which
I am one of those who are very willing to be refuted if I say anything which is not true, and very willing to refute
Just a few weeks ago, I gushed over Peggy Orenstein’s piece in the NYT on the war on breast cancer. Today Angelina Jolie wrote an
There is an interesting detail in the results from the Oregon Medicaid Experiment (read Austin and Aaron’s many recent posts on this blog for background). Recall
Last night I had a false start in updating power calculations for the Medicaid Oregon study. The final result with corrections and a new PDF
Sorry for the false start last night. More about that here. I still welcome comments if you find any errors. This is a follow up
In retirement, my mom volunteers her time teaching English as a second language. My student and I discussed (briefly) the inconsistent use of articles before
I spoke with Russ Roberts of EconTalk for an hour or so about the Oregon Medicaid study. The conversation took place last Thursday. As you
Superstar blogger Adrianna McIntyre of Project Millennial got me those Lurie et al papers. They are two reports of patients who were dropped from the Medi-Cal program in
So some people have asked why I have focused on diabetes so much, and not blood pressure or Framingham composite results, when looking at the
I’ve taught in elite academic settings for a while now. Academic life being what it is, many of my students come from wealthy backgrounds. Children