...
首页> 外文期刊>Medical decision making: An international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making >Physician and Nonphysician Estimates of Positive Predictive Value in Diagnostic v. Mass Screening Mammography: An Examination of Bayesian Reasoning
【24h】

Physician and Nonphysician Estimates of Positive Predictive Value in Diagnostic v. Mass Screening Mammography: An Examination of Bayesian Reasoning

机译:诊断型阳性预测值的医生和非物理学估计。大规模筛选乳房X线照相术:贝叶斯推理的检查

获取原文
获取原文并翻译 | 示例
           

摘要

Background. The same test with the same result has different positive predictive values (PPVs) for people with different pretest probability of disease. Representative thinking theory suggests people are unlikely to realize this because they ignore or underweight prior beliefs when given new information (e.g., test results) or due to confusing test sensitivity (probability of positive test given disease) with PPV (probability of disease given positive test). This research examines whether physicians and MBAs intuitively know that PPV following positive mammography for an asymptomatic woman is less than PPV for a symptomatic woman and, if so, whether they correctly perceive the difference. Design. Sixty general practitioners (GPs) and 84 MBA students were given 2 vignettes of women with abnormal (positive) mammography tests: 1 with prior symptoms (diagnostic test), the other an asymptomatic woman participating in mass screening (screening test). Respondents estimated pretest and posttest probabilities. Sensitivity and specificity were neither provided nor elicited. Results. Eighty-eight percent of GPs and 46% of MBAs considered base rates and estimated PPV in diagnosis greater than PPV in screening. On average, GPs estimated a 27-point difference and MBAs an 18-point difference, compared to actual of 55 or more points. Ten percent of GPs and 46% of MBAs ignored base rates, incorrectly assessing the 2 PPVs as equal. Conclusions. Physicians and patients are better at intuitive Bayesian reasoning than is suggested by studies that make test accuracy values readily available to be confused with PPV. However, MBAs and physicians interpret a positive in screening as more similar to a positive in diagnosis than it is, with nearly half of MBAs and some physicians wrongly equating the two. This has implications for overdiagnosis and overtreatment.
机译:背景。具有相同结果的相同测试对具有不同疾病概率的人具有不同的阳性预测值(PPV)。代表性的思维理论表明,人们不太可能意识到这一点,因为当给定新信息(例如,测试结果)或由于令人困惑的试验敏感性(对给定疾病的疾病疾病的概率)(疾病的概率给予阳性试验概率)时,他们忽视或超重的先前信仰)。这项研究检查了医生和MBA是否直观地知道无症状患者的正乳腺X线摄影后的PPV小于PPV,如果是的话,他们是否正确察觉差异。设计。六十名全科医生(GPS)和84名MBA学生获得了2名患有异常(阳性)乳房X线摄影试验的妇女:1患有现有症状(诊断测试),另一个参与大规模筛选的无症状妇女(筛选试验)。受访者估计预测和最低概率。敏感性和特异性既不提供也不引发。结果。百分之八十八个GPS和46%的MBA被认为是基本速率,并且估计在筛选中诊断的诊断大于PPV。平均而言,GPS估计27分差和MBA为18分差,与55点或更多点相比。百分之十的GPS和46%的MBA被忽略了基本速率,错误地评估了2个PPV的平等。结论。医生和患者在直观的贝叶斯推理中更好,而不是通过研究建议,使测试精度值易于与PPV混淆。然而,MBA和医生在筛查中解释阳性,与诊断中的阳性相似,比它与近一半的MBA和一些医生错误地等同于这两者。这对过度输入和过度处理有影响。

著录项

相似文献

  • 外文文献
  • 中文文献
  • 专利
获取原文

客服邮箱:kefu@zhangqiaokeyan.com

京公网安备:11010802029741号 ICP备案号:京ICP备15016152号-6 六维联合信息科技 (北京) 有限公司©版权所有
  • 客服微信

  • 服务号