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C**E
great purchase
Not embarked on the read yet, but from fellow students have heard this is a good educational necessity.
T**R
Excellent.
Let's face it, you probably aren't looking for a book on medical statistics for a light holiday read or a relaxing weekend, but hey maybe you are, no judgement here! You probably need it for a course or are looking for the right textbook for independent study. Well, for any of these reasons this is an excellent book. It is in fact enjoyable as it makes the topic easier to retain and use and the layout is study and user friendly. The book is written by experts in their field and of course Wiley and Blackwell are highly reliable academic textbook publishers. The price is a bargain actually for books of this caliber, which you will know if you regularly buy textbooks, and although I recommend getting the paperback edition for overall layout and use, it is great it is available in Kindle too as the book is large and heavy to carry around.If you have got the required prerequisites for studying statistics at undergraduate level then you should have no problem with this book. It gives you all you need to understand the topic and take it into a higher level. The book is detailed and in depth and the authors have understood what you need to know and present it in a way that is comprehensive and flows; it will enhance your study of the topic. If you have to, or want to study medical statistics this is the book for you. I highly recommend this book.
S**T
Good reference work on the subject
Everyone in every subject needs to be able to grasp and understand stats in this day and age - and this is particularly true in medicine.However, it's hardly, for most people, a gripping subject. This is a good reference work for the common room library - a gift, perhaps for your colleagues.
M**7
Superb for health and social science students
Research is an important aspect of both the health and social sciences but the statistical work that accompanies it is generally not a very popular subject. Especially with social science students who tend to be arts-based rather than science-based in their focus, so maths is often not a happy (or recent) subject for many of them. But it is a necessity for conducting research - and this excellent book is a wonderful support - both for experienced and novice students of statistical methods. The focus of the book is very much around real world needs and uses of research and statistical analysis, and that context makes it so much easier to grasp the concepts and understand the necessity for what you are doing. And that is half the battle - and it makes the learning so much less painful. The book covers the full range of research modes, from longitudinal to short term evaluations, and everything in between and it provides exercises to help with understanding and confidence. It is also fully referenced and even has statistical tables in the back. Brilliant.
T**T
An excellent book - aimed at professional/undergraduate level
This is the medical statistics book I wanted. Professionally, I don't have to DO statistics - but I do have to understand them, and I have to explain them to other people. I have usually resorted to the internet, because most statistics books will do exactly the reverse: teach you how to do it, but not why (or why not).This book is for the practical professional (or undergraduate - by the time you've done serious statistical study you should be beyond this) who maybe needs to do some simple statistics, but mostly really needs to understand how it all works so that they can interpret statistical data produced by someone else. The authors have made an effort to use real-world examples (I now know more about corns than I did before, so I can die happy) so you can see the various issues/tests in action, and they have also included discussion of the latest hot statistical topics. There's a whole bit on p-hacking which should probably be tattooed across some people's chests.You can dip and out of this book on a chapter-by-chapter basis, because each chapter is self-contained, but you probably do need to read the whole chapter to understand the narrative. Again, this is because this book is about teaching you WHY to do statistics, not just to do the calculations.They will pry this book from my cold, dead hands.
A**O
Good stats book
Got this for my niece who is in research and she says it’s very well written, great techniques for different medical analysis. Chapters then advances on to clinical analysis and requires a bit more mathematical understanding. Each chapters contains questions in multiple choices form along with detailed answers.
A**L
Very useful
Very useful for our medical student son.
J**K
Excellent collection for practical users
I'm studying 2nd year philosophy and psychology and stats have started to creep their way into everything. I enjoy maths but haven't studied it for ages.I was delighted with this book, it contains all the topics I've been exposed to and those that I know are on the horizon. Google is all well and good to find explanations but I much prefer a book with everything contained, concise and set out to learn sequentially.I can reccomend this to anyone that has to work with a bit of statistics, whether or not your studying something medical - the vast majority is applicable to all of the social sciences
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