Multiple imputation for estimating the risk of developing dementia and its impact on survival
From MaRDI portal
Publication:3056478
DOI10.1002/bimj.200900266zbMath1201.62136WikidataQ35615091 ScholiaQ35615091MaRDI QIDQ3056478
Binbing Yu, Jane S. Saczynski, Lenore Launer
Publication date: 12 November 2010
Published in: Biometrical Journal (Search for Journal in Brave)
Full work available at URL: http://europepmc.org/articles/pmc3238391
62P10: Applications of statistics to biology and medical sciences; meta analysis
62N01: Censored data models
92C50: Medical applications (general)
60K15: Markov renewal processes, semi-Markov processes
62N02: Estimation in survival analysis and censored data
Uses Software
Cites Work
- Unnamed Item
- Multi-state Model for Dementia, Institutionalization, and Death
- A Penalized Likelihood Approach for Arbitrarily Censored and Truncated Data: Application to Age-Specific Incidence of Dementia
- A Multiple Imputation Approach to Cox Regression with Interval‐Censored Data
- Age-Specific Incidence and Prevalence: A Statistical Perspective
- Multi-state models for event history analysis
- Inference for multi-state models from interval-censored data
- Likelihood for Generally Coarsened Observations from Multistate or Counting Process Models
- Choice between Semi‐parametric Estimators of Markov and Non‐Markov Multi‐state Models from Coarsened Observations
- A penalized likelihood approach for an illness-death model with interval-censored data: application to age-specific incidence of dementia