The Frequency of Cancer Deaths in the Same House and in Neighbouring Houses
- 1 February 1935
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Epidemiology and Infection
- Vol. 35 (1) , 46-63
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0022172400018969
Abstract
The problem as to the frequency with which multiple cases of, or deaths from, a disease may be expected to occur in the same house has been attacked by Troup and Maynard (1911–12), Karl Pearson (1911–12, 1911–12 a, 1913), McKendrick (1911–12), Greenwood and Yule (1920), Greenwood (1910, 1931) and others. Troup and Maynard obtained a general expression for the frequency of occurrence, and the standard deviation of the frequency, of s casesin a house when n cases of a disease occur in a town with m houses, assumingeach house to contain the same number of persons, all equally liable to contract it. Karl Pearson (1911–12) considered the problem as analogous to throwing balls at random into equally accessible pigeon-holes, and showed that since the chance that any one case will fall into any one house is , and that it will not is , the numbers of houses having 0, 1, 2, 3, ... cases should be given by the successive terms of the binomial . In a later paper (1913) he showed that the correspondence between the observed andexpected frequencies could be measured by applying the ordinary X2 test to the frequencies, omitting the houses having no cases.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- A CO‐OPERATIVE STUDY OF THE HABITS, HOME LIFE, DIETARY AND FAMILY HISTORIES OF 450 CANCER PATIENTS AND OF AN EQUAL NUMBER OF CONTROL PATIENTSAnnals of Eugenics, 1933
- On the Statistical Measure of InfectiousnessEpidemiology and Infection, 1931
- An Inquiry into the Nature of Frequency Distributions Representative of Multiple Happenings with Particular Reference to the Occurrence of Multiple Attacks of Disease or of Repeated AccidentsJournal of the Royal Statistical Society, 1920
- Multiple Cases of Disease in the same House: Appendix to Papers in Biometrika, VOL. VIII. p. 404 AND p. 430Biometrika, 1913
- ON THE APPEARANCE OF MULTIPLE CASES OF DISEASE IN THE SAME HOUSEBiometrika, 1912
- NOTE ON THE EXTENT TO WHICH THE DISTRIBUTION OF CASES OF DISEASE IN HOUSES IS DETERMINED BY THE LAWS OF CHANCEBiometrika, 1912
- A Simplified Method of Calculating Frequencies of Occurrence, from a Large Number of Unequal ProbabilitiesBiometrika, 1912