Chance News 74: Difference between revisions

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<blockquote>This bubble-based analysis can have either positive or negative implications depending on the application. Potential applications range from detection of cheating on standardized tests to attacks on the secrecy of election ballots.</blockquote>  
<blockquote>This bubble-based analysis can have either positive or negative implications depending on the application. Potential applications range from detection of cheating on standardized tests to attacks on the secrecy of election ballots.</blockquote>  
===Discussion===
1.  How should a defense attorney respond to a prosecutor who relied on this study to prove a case of cheating against a test-taker (perhaps under some statute about fraud)?<br>
2.  Suppose that, as the researchers state in their report, "on-line analysis has the potential to achieve even higher rates of accuracy."  In that case, a defense attorney might be interested in false positive rates (probability of an incorrect match given a positive match result), which are usually very high when the expected incidence of some condition is very low.  Do you believe that the false positive rate here would be high, even if the identification sensitivity and selectivity rates were improved to a level of 99%?<br>


Submitted by Margaret Cibes
Submitted by Margaret Cibes

Revision as of 14:03, 21 June 2011

Quotations

"The government are very keen on amassing statistics. They collect them, add them, raise them to the nth power, take the cube root and prepare wonderful diagrams. But you must never forget that every one of these figures comes in the first instance from the village watchman, who just puts down what he damn pleases."

Sir Josiah Charles Stamp [1880-1941]

As quoted by Howard Wainer, in Picturing the Uncertain World Princeton University Press, 2009, p. 23. The above observation is by no means dated, as shown by the following exerpt from p. 24:

"The term curbstoning describes a practice that is widespread enough to warrant inclusion in the glossary of The 2000 Census: Interim Assessment, which defines it as 'The practice by which a census enumerator fabricates a questionnaire for a residence without actually visiting it.' "

Submitted by Paul Alper


"So when I hear scientists say, 'The data speak for themselves,' I cringe. Data never speak. And data generally and most often are politically and socially inflected."

Andrew J. Hoffman, Professor of Sustainable Enterprise, University of Michigan

As quoted in Q. and A.: Taking On Climate Skepticism as a Field of Study, Green Blog, New York Times, 9 April 2011

Submitted by Bill Peterson

Forsooth

"Is there one New Yorker in a hundred who knows what the morning line is? (It’s the track oddsmaker’s estimate of how the public will bet each horse in a race, expressed in probabilities like 3/1 or 7/2.)"

Belmont awaits its annual return to glory, New York Times, 9 June 2011

Submitted by Bill Peterson


"Did you hear about the statistician who took a bomb with him whenever he got on an airplane? He did this as a safeguard against terrorism, reasoning that although the chance is low that a terrorist will bring a bomb onto a particular airplane, the chance is really low that two people will bring bombs onto the same plane."

Michael Orkin, What Are The Odds?, Freeman, 2000, p. 23

Submitted by Margaret Cibes

Overdiagnosed, overtreated

Obviously, the sun revolves around the earth, the harmonic series converges and the earth is flat. Likewise, the prevailing medical paradigm is: early screening leads to early intervention resulting in improved medical outcomes. Completely plausible and believed by most patients and medical practitioners alike. If you are one of the believers then you ought to read H. Gilbert Welch’s Overdiagnosed: Making People Sick In The Pursuit of Health (Beacon Press, 2011).

It has become increasingly evident with regard to prostate cancer or breast cancer that, “While it may seem that screening can only help you, it can also hurt you: it can lead you to being overdiagnosed and treated needlessly.” Consider a different cancer, one far less frequent: thyroid cancer. According to Welch, the ratio of prostate cancer deaths to diagnoses is 1 to 6 but the ratio for thyroid cancer is 1 to 20.

One possible explanation for this, as you will recall from similar issues with prostate cancer, is that we are really, really good at treating thyroid cancer. The other is less optimistic: that many of the diagnosed cancers didn’t need treatment in the first place.

Further, despite the “dramatic growth in the number of thyroid cancers found,” “The death rate for thyroid cancer is rock-solid stable.” He puts it boldly for thyroid cancer: “Here there is just a downside—a lot of diagnosis and no change in mortality…there is no discernible benefit.” This overtreatment results in the unnecessary removal of the thyroid gland and the need to take medication for the rest of the person’s life.

On page 64 is a time series graph that shows new thyroid cancer diagnoses and thyroid cancer deaths vs. time (1975 to 2005); new diagnoses rise inexorably with time while deaths are flatlined over the 30-year period. Two pages later there is virtually the same graph but now for melanoma and again the ratio of cancer deaths to diagnoses is high enough to speculate that “there is less an epidemic of melanoma than an epidemic of diagnoses.”

One reason for the general increase in overdiagnoses is the changing of the rules, the moving of the goalposts. Thresholds for diabetes, hypertension, hyperlipidemia and osteoporosis have been changed such that the disease prevalence has increased by 14%, 35%, 86% and 85%, respectively. “Whether or not” the cutoff changes were “a good thing for the individuals is a tough question. But there is no question about whether or not it was a good thing for business. These changes substantially increased the market for treatments—and the money to be made from them.”

As might be expected, the experts who set the cutoffs had financial relationships with the pharmaceutical industry which stood to gain many millions of new customers. However, “To be fair, many of these experts may be true believers…but the fact that there is so much money on the table may lead them to overestimate the benefits and harms of overdiagnosis.”

The publisher's webpage excerpts the Introduction to the book, and provides links to numerous reviews from current newspapers.

The author was interviewed on the radio show People's Pharmacy; the interview can be listened to here.

Discussion
1. A somewhat companion book for this topic is Shannon Brownlee’s Overtreated: Why Too Much Medicine Is Making Us Sicker and Poorer. Although published four years before Overdiagnosed, Welch makes no reference to her book.

2. HeathNewsReview.org is an excellent weekly website that deals critically with health and medical matters, especially of harms vs. benefits, relative risks vs. absolute risks.

3. Why would an overdiagnosis have health insurance consequences?

4. Welch often mentions the term, “incidentaloma.” Wikipedia says “In medicine, an incidentaloma is a tumor (-oma) found by coincidence (incidental) without clinical symptoms or suspicion. It is a common problem.” Why might an incidentaloma lead to overdiagnosis?

5. Lawyers and fear of a malpractice suit are discussed in the book. Why might they lead to overdiagnosis and overtreatment?

Submitted by Paul Alper

See also More Harm Than Good: What Your Doctor May Not Tell You about Common Treatments and Procedures, 2008. The authors are strong advocates for evidence-based medical decision-making.

Submitted by Margaret Cibes

A related graphic

The following graphic appeared in a 2009 New York Times article, Cancer Society, in shift, has concerns on screenings.

http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2009/10/21/health/1021-biz-cancergraphic/popup.jpg

The article quotes Dr. Otis Brawley, chief medical officer of the American Cancer Society: “We don’t want people to panic. But I’m admitting that American medicine has overpromised when it comes to screening. The advantages to screening have been exaggerated.”

See also Lung cancer screening may increase your risk of dying from Chance News 25.

Submitted by Paul Alper

Kidney cancer

A classic example of data maps is presented by Howard Wainer in Picturing the Uncertain World; it can be seen here. Many rural counties show up in the lowest decile for kidney cancer rates, which might suggest that climate or lifestyle have some benefit. But then it is seen that adjoining, similarly rural, counties turn up in the highest decile. Shown below is a map that accompanied Wainer's discussion of the example in an article entitled The Most Dangerous Equation (American Scientist May-June 2007 Volume 95, Number 3, p. 249).

http://www.americanscientist.org/Libraries/images/2007327141118_846.gif

The highest decile counties are shown in red, the lowest in green. What we are seeing the effect of variation in small samples: because the rural counties have so few people, having one case vs. no cases makes the difference between the being in the top vs. the bottom decile for standardized rates of kidney cancer!

Submitted by Paul Alper

Facts vs. beliefs

“How facts backfire: Researchers discover a surprising threat to democracy: our brains”
by Joe Keohane, boston.com, July 11, 2010

Political scientists have been researching people’s abilities to alter their uninformed opinions and/or beliefs when confronted with accurate information and concluded:

Facts don’t necessarily have the power to change our minds. In fact, quite the opposite.

Studies appear to indicate that when people with strong political views are shown corrected facts in news stories, “they rarely changed their minds.” In fact, “our beliefs can dictate the facts we choose to accept.” Add this to the unprecedented amount of information available today and the widespread “political ignorance of the American voter," and political scientists are concerned about the threat to rational voting choices by our citizenry.

A 2000 study, in particular, showed that, while only 3% of 1000 Illinois residents answered more than half of a series of questions about welfare correctly, more than half expressed confidence in their answers. Other studies have confirmed this relationship between knowledge and confidence in knowledge with respect to partisan issues. Accepting information that is consistent with our beliefs, rightly or wrongly, is called “motivated reasoning.”

The focus of this article is a more recent study study[1] of undergraduates at a Midwestern college in 2005-2006. In one experiment, participants first read news stories with a planted, provably false but widely believed, fact, and then read a correction. The result was that those who had believed the non-fact before reading the correction believed it even more strongly after reading the correction. This effect was stronger in self-identified conservatives than in self-identified liberals.

This article discusses several other studies on the potential effect of education on participants, and posits possible solutions to this problem.

Submitted by Margaret Cibes

Vietnam draft vulnerability vs. attitudes toward war

“Voting and the Vietnam Draft”, by Christopher Shea, The Wall Street Journal, June 11, 2011.
"Caught in the Draft: The Effects of Vietnam Draft Lottery Status on Political Attitudes", by Robert S. Erikson and Laura Stoker, American Political Science Review, February 2010.
Abstract of "Caught in the Draft: The Effects of Vietnam Draft Lottery Status on Political Attitudes", by Robert S. Erikson and Laura Stoker, American Political Science Review, May 2011.

Shea summarizes an AP report about a study of the relationship between 260 young men’s 1969 Vietnam draft lottery numbers and their attitudes toward war and politics, independent of their actual military service. The study involved interviews with male high-school graduates (class of ’65) in the 1960s, 1970s, and 1990s. Lottery numbers ranged from 1 to 366, where 1 corresponded to those with January 1 birthdays (highest priority for the draft) and 366 to those with December 31 birthdays (lowest priority).

Men with the lowest lottery number were about one point more dovish … - assuming similar demographic characteristics - than men with the highest lottery number.

The February 2010 paper includes details of the study. Caveat: Some of the relationships analyzed were not found to be statistically significant.

The abstract of the 2011 article states:

Males holding low lottery numbers became more antiwar, more liberal, and more Democratic in their voting compared to those whose high numbers protected them from the draft. They were also more likely than those with safe numbers to abandon the party identification that they had held as teenagers.

Submitted by Margaret Cibes

Bubble prints

“Bursting the Bubble”, by Christopher Shea, The Wall Street Journal, June 18, 2011.
"Bubble Trouble: Off-Line De-Anonymization of Bubble Forms", by Joseph A. Calandrino, William Clarkson, and Edward W. Felten (to be presented at the Usenix Security Symposium, August 2011).

Shea reports that researchers have found that pencil strokes such as those used on fill-in-the-bubble answer sheets are “distinctive” enough to identify the person who filled them in.

He describes an experiment in which researchers programmed a computer to analyze “the mark's center of mass, the variance of pencil-strokes from the bubble's radius and the depth of shading, as well as more mathematically advanced measures.”

The computer analyzed 92 student surveys, checking a dozen marks from each respondent. Then the researchers scrutinized eight marks from a randomly picked person. The computer identified its man or woman 51% of the time. The correct answer was among the computer's top three choices 75% of the time and was 92.4% of the time among the top 10.

The researchers state:

This bubble-based analysis can have either positive or negative implications depending on the application. Potential applications range from detection of cheating on standardized tests to attacks on the secrecy of election ballots.

Discussion

1. How should a defense attorney respond to a prosecutor who relied on this study to prove a case of cheating against a test-taker (perhaps under some statute about fraud)?
2. Suppose that, as the researchers state in their report, "on-line analysis has the potential to achieve even higher rates of accuracy." In that case, a defense attorney might be interested in false positive rates (probability of an incorrect match given a positive match result), which are usually very high when the expected incidence of some condition is very low. Do you believe that the false positive rate here would be high, even if the identification sensitivity and selectivity rates were improved to a level of 99%?

Submitted by Margaret Cibes

Decling sperm counts? Maybe not

In Update on Sperm, Data Show No Decline, Gina Kolata, The New York Times, June 6, 2011.

A meta-analysis published in 1992 showed a very scary trend. Sperm counts were dropping.

The idea that sperm counts were plummeting began with an alarming paper published in 1992 by a group of Danish researchers. Sperm counts, they reported, declined by 50 percent worldwide from 1938 to 1991, and the trend would continue, they said.

Even at the time, the study had its share of critics.

Many other researchers criticized the data’s quality, citing flaws like a lack of standardized methods of collecting semen, methodological issues in semen analysis, biases in the ways men were selected, and variations in the length of time men abstained from ejaculating before their semen was collected. The study, said Dolores Lamb, a fertility expert at Baylor College of Medicine and president-elect of the American Society of Reproductive Medicine, “was problematic and raised alarms in society without critical thinking about the caveats and weaknesses inherent in the data and its analysis.”

But it was hard to find good solid data to address this topic. But a new data set seems to be just what is needed to look at the trend in sperm counts. And it came from the same source as the original study.

Meanwhile, the same Danish group that got the debate started began a study that analyzed annual semen samples collected from 18-year-old men who were being examined for their fitness for the military — a requirement in Denmark. Over the past 15 years, a total of 5,000 men provided semen for analysis.

This study looked at a homogenous group of men and used uniform collection techniques. It covered a long enough time frame to have sufficient power to detect any important trends, which it did not find. But what was odd was how the data first appeared.

The research group’s current leader, Niels Jorgensen, sent the data to the Danish Ministry of Health, which helped pay for the study, and the ministry then posted the data on its Web site.

This bypassed the peer-review process, angering some scientists. A peer-review article and accompanying editorial did emerge eventually in Epidemiology.

Questions

1. Assuming a 50% decline in sperm counts from 1938 to 1991, how long would it take until the average man would be sterile. Discuss some of the assumptions in this calculation.

2. Should data collected using government funds be made available immediately, or should it be held back until a peer-reviewed publication appears with a credible analysis of the data.

Submitted by Steve Simon

Credit rating companies rate your health

Keeping Score on How You Take Your Medicine by Tara Parker-Pope, The New York Times - Well, June 20, 2011.

Loan companies won't talk with you until they've checked your credit score with a credit rating company. Now your doctor might not talk with you until he/she has checked you out with the same credit rating company. It's not your ability to repay a loan that they are worried about. They want to know about adherence, your ability to take medicines regularly.

Which patients are likely to take their prescription medications correctly and which ones are likely to deviate from the plan? FICO, a company whose credit score is widely used to assess the credit worthiness of millions of consumers, is planning to answer that question. It has developed a new FICO Medication Adherence Score that it says can predict which patients are at highest risk for skipping or incorrectly using prescription medications.

Can you measure poor adherence the same sort of way that you measure poor payment history? Apparently so.

"We started thinking about how do consumers behave as patients," said Mark Greene, the chief executive of FICO, based in Minneapolis. "The problem, from a math standpoint, is not all that different from banking and other industries."

But this score won't be used to deny you health care treatment.

FICO officials say insurance companies and other health care groups will use the score to identify those patients who could benefit the most from follow-up phone calls, letters and e-mails to encourage proper use of medication.

And it won't require the credit score rating company to snoop into your private health records.

The FICO medication score is based on publicly available data, like home ownership and job status, and does not rely on a patient’s medical history or financial information to predict whether he or she will take medication as directed. So, like a credit rating, it can be compiled without a person’s knowledge or permission.

Questions

1. How good could an adherence score be if it did not look at your medical records?

2. Do companies have a right to compile information like this about you? What recourse would you have/should you have if the adherence score is incorrect?