Odds ratio/Related Articles
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- See also changes related to Odds ratio, or pages that link to Odds ratio or to this page or whose text contains "Odds ratio".
Parent topics
- Health science [r]: The helping professions that use applied science to improve health and to treat disease. [e]
- Mathematics [r]: The study of quantities, structures, their relations, and changes thereof. [e]
Subtopics
- Cohort study [r]: A medical or sociological study in which cohorts, people who share characteristics or experiences, are studied. [e]
- Colorectal cancer [r]: Malignancy that arises from the lining of either the colon or the rectum. [e]
- Evidence-based medicine [r]: The conscientious, explicit and judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients. [e]
- Logistic regression [r]: Method of predicting the probability of occurrence of an event by fitting data to a logistic curve. [e]
- Number needed to treat [r]: Epidemiological measure that indicates how many patients would require treatment with a form of medication to reduce the expected number of cases of a defined endpoint by one. [e]
- Odds [r]: The probability that the event occurs divided by the probability that the event does not occur. [e]
- Pneumococcal vaccine [r]: Vaccines or candidate vaccines used to prevent infections with streptococcus pneumoniae. [e]
- Smoking cessation [r]: Medical term for quitting smoking of tobacco and tobacco-related products. [e]
- Vascular disease [r]: Pathological processes involving any of the blood vessels in the cardiac or peripheral circulation. They include diseases of arteries; veins; and rest of the vasculature system in the body. [e]
- Case-control study [r]: Research into the risk factors of people with a disease, compared with those without a disease. [e]
- Odds [r]: The probability that the event occurs divided by the probability that the event does not occur. [e]
- History of neuroimaging [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Health science [r]: The helping professions that use applied science to improve health and to treat disease. [e]