How Statistical Expertise Is Used in Medical Research
Open Access
- 5 June 2002
- journal article
- quality issues-and-standards
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in JAMA
- Vol. 287 (21) , 2817-2820
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.287.21.2817
Abstract
ContextInvestigation of the nature and frequency of statistician involvement in medical research and its relation to the final editorial decision.MethodsAuthors of original research articles who submitted to BMJ and Annals of Internal Medicine from May through August 2001 were sent a short questionnaire at the time of manuscript submission. Authors were asked if they received assistance from a person with statistical expertise, the nature of any such contribution, and reasons why, if no statistical input was received.ResultsThe response rate was 75% (704/943); methodological input was reported for 514 (73%) of these papers. In 435 papers (85%), such input was provided by biostatisticians or epidemiologists and, if deemed significant, was typically associated with authorship. A total of 33 of 122 methodologists (27%) whose main contribution started at the analysis stage received neither acknowledgment nor authorship. Research without methodological assistance was more likely to be rejected without review (71% vs 57%; χ2 = 10.6; P = .001) and possibly less likely to be accepted for publication (7% vs 11%; χ2 = 2.37; P = .12).ConclusionsStatistical input to medical research is widely recommended but inconsistently obtained. Individuals providing such expertise are often not involved until the analysis of data and many go unrecognized by either authorship or acknowledgment.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reporting on Statistical Methods To Adjust for Confounding: A Cross-Sectional SurveyAnnals of Internal Medicine, 2002
- Participation of epidemiologists and/or biostatisticians and methodological quality of published controlled clinical trialsJournal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 2001
- Transfer of technology from statistical journals to the biomedical literature. Past trends and future predictionsPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1994
- The scandal of poor medical researchBMJ, 1994
- The Risk of Determining Risk with Multivariable ModelsAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1993
- Statistics in medical journalsStatistics in Medicine, 1982