Description
Real world health care data is common and growing in use with sources such as observational studies, patient registries, electronic medical record databases, insurance healthcare claims databases, as well as data from pragmatic trials. This data serves as the basis for the growing use of real world evidence in medical decision-making. However, the data itself is not evidence. Analytical methods must be used to turn real world data into valid and meaningful evidence. Real World Health Care Data Analysis: Causal Methods and Implementation Using SAS brings together best practices for causal comparative effectiveness analyses based on real world data in a single location and provides SAS code and examples to make the analyses relatively easy and efficient.
The book focuses on analytic methods adjusted for time-independent confounding, which are useful when comparing the effect of different potential interventions on some outcome of interest when there is no randomization. These methods include:
- propensity score matching, stratification methods, weighting methods, regression methods, and approaches that combine and average across these methods
- methods for comparing two interventions as well as comparisons between three or more interventions
- algorithms for personalized medicine
- sensitivity analyses for unmeasured confounding
Author: Douglas Faries, Xiang Zhang, Zbigniew Kadziola
Publisher: SAS Institute
Published: 01/15/2020
Pages: 436
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 2.84lbs
Size: 11.00h x 8.50w x 0.94d
ISBN13: 9781642958027
ISBN10: 1642958026
BISAC Categories:
- Computers | Mathematical & Statistical Software
- Computers | Business & Productivity Software | General
About the Author
Douglas Faries graduated from Oklahoma State University with a PhD in Statistics in 1990 and joined Eli Lilly and Company later that year. Over the past 17 years, Doug has focused his research interests on statistical methodology for real world data including causal inference, comparative effectiveness, unmeasured confounding, and the use of real world data for personalized medicine. Currently, Doug is a Sr. Research Fellow at Eli Lilly, leading the Real-World Analytics Capabilities team. He has authored or co-authored over 150 peer-reviewed manuscripts including editing the textbook Analysis of Observational Healthcare Data Using SAS in 2010. He is active in the statistical community as a publication reviewer, speaker, workshop organizer, and teaches short courses in causal inference at national meetings. He has been a SAS user since 1988.