Concepedia

TLDR

Since 1980, Altman’s BMJ series highlighted the need for accessible statistical guidance, yet clinicians often find conventional biostatistics texts confusing and overly technical. The book aims to equip readers with essential statistical concepts needed to comprehend contemporary biomedical research. Altman’s monograph is praised for its clarity and practicality, making statistical ideas approachable for medical professionals.

Abstract

In 1980, the<i>British Medical Journal</i>(volume 281) published a series of readable and informative articles by Douglas G. Altman entitled "Statistics and Ethics in Medical Research." Now comes a monograph by the same author, and it is a winner. Health care professionals recognize their obligation to have some familiarity with biometry, biostatistics, clinical epidemiology, or whatever the subject might be called. We all need to understand at least some of the fundamental ideas and methods if we expect to follow the current biomedical literature. Researchers must know considerably more than just the fundamentals. Textbooks of biostatistics are commonly frustrating to the clinician or biomedical researcher who has not had formal training in statistics. The books tend to use strange, often idiosyncratic, notation. The algebra may be arcane or cryptic. The technical discourse is often too esoteric for even the most diligent reader of medical literature. Altman's excellent book avoids