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Much of what he »hear about statistics… is malformed. But Doctors, who we expect to understand the nature of tests, often do not.

Additionally, at the order of a single individual? Probability does not work. Probability requires a cohort, and the character of the cohort disappears with a sample size of 1. This is why doctors who employ statistics in client explanations are often completely wrong. No one can predict ‘at the level of a single individual’ with any dependable degree of probabilistic accuracy. While there may be a few explicit exceptions, in general, probability is about cohorts, and no person comprises a cohort (group). Testing, however, is a unique context, since we are testing for the presence of evidence of disease. This doesn’t tell us the outcomes, but is reasonably dependable (statistically) when the statistics are properly understood.

Nov 13, 2015

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