Design and Analysis of Group-Randomized Trials

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AGGIUNGI AL CARRELLO
TRAMA
This text provides the most comprehensive treatment of the design and analytic issues involved in group-randomized trials. GRTs are comparative studies conducted to evaluate the effect of a health promotion intervention in which the units of assignment are identifiable groups (e.g., schools, worksites) and the units of observation are members of those groups (e.g., students, workers). The book reviews the underlying issues, the most widely used research designs, and analytic strategies. There is an emphasis on mixed-model regression, with two chapters illustrating the analytic methods in SAS PROC MIXED and GLIMMIX. There is also a detailed chapter on power analysis and sample size calculation.
NOTE EDITORE
This is the first comprehensive text on the design and analysis of group-randomized trials. It It collects information previously scattered among journals and texts in a variety of disciplines, and, in addition, presents much new material not available elsewhere. The book has been written to help those involved in these trials improve their ability to plan, fund, conduct, analyse, and interpret them, and to give students a detailed understanding of the field. Group-randomized trials are comparative studies in which the units of assignment are identifiable groups and the units of observation are members of those groups. The positive intraclass correlation expected among the members of each group poses unique and challenging issues for the design and analysis of these trials and separates them from the traditional clinical trial. After reviewing the underlying issues, Murray presents the research designs that are most widely used in group-randomized trials, together with their strengths, weaknesses, and appropriate applications. He describes the many approaches to analysis that are now available, presents mixed-model regression analyses appropriate to each design, and illustrates them using data from the Minnesota Heart Health Program. He also covers methods for estimating sample size, detectable difference, and power. This volume is not limited only to a conceptual treatment of the issues and solutions. It offers a review of the practical applications in a series of case studies, examples, and problems.

SOMMARIO
1 - Introduction2 - Planning the Trials3 - Research Design4 - Planning the Analysis5 - Analysis for Nested Cross-Sectional Designs6 - Analysis for Nested-Cohort Designs7 - Applications of Analyses for Nested Cross-Sectional Designs8 - Applications of Analyses for Nested-Cohort Designs9 - Sample Size, Detectable Difference and Power10 - Case Studies

AUTORE
David M. Murray has spent his career evaluating intervention programs designed to improve the public health. Beginning in the late 1980s, Dr. Murray focused on the design and analysis of group-randomized trials to assess the effect of an intervention. Dr. Murray served as the first Chair of the Community-Level Heath Promotion study section, which reviews many of the group-randomized trials submitted to NIH. After 35 years at the University of Minnesota, the University of Memphis, and the Ohio State University, Dr. Murray joined the NIH in September 2012, as the Associate Director for Prevention and Director of the Office of Disease Prevention. He is responsible for promoting and coordinating prevention research among and between NIH Institutes and Centers and other public and private entities.

ALTRE INFORMAZIONI
  • Condizione: Nuovo
  • ISBN: 9780195120363
  • Collana: Monographs in Epidemiology and Biostatistics
  • Dimensioni: 165 x 32.0 x 240 mm Ø 1 gr
  • Formato: Copertina rigida
  • Illustration Notes: line figures and tables
  • Pagine Arabe: 480