1. In conversations with her patients, a physical therapist notices that patients who
are on Workman's Compensation and have supportive supervisors, eager for them
to return to work, have more positive outcomes in rehabilitation than those
patients whose supervisors have a negative attitude toward their employee's injury
insisting they not return to work until they are at 100% because if anything less
they are "useless to the job".
What type of test could the therapist use to see if these two factors have a
measurable relationship <Ans> Linear regression
2. Data analysts at a large metropolitan hospital need to determine risk factors
associated with readmission within 30 days via the hospital's emergency room
among patients with COPD. The variables of interest include age, gender,
race/ethnicity, insurance status, and family support. Which statistical tech- nique
should be used <Ans> Regression analysis
3. Several community health centers across a rural state are gathering data on their
pre-diabetic patients and using A1c levels as a baseline measurement to include
patients in a research project. Three different interventions will be applied.
One group of patients will receive a special diet to follow; the second group will work
with physical therapists on a regular exercise program; the third group will follow
the diet and engage in the exercise.
,Which statistical test will be appropriate to use to determine which treatment is
most effective in controlling pre-diabetes <Ans> ANOVA
4. A hospital CFO is analyzing the cost benefits of using the patient reminder
system, which was implemented over a year ago, to see if the automated system
results in less missed appointments ("no-shows").
She is comparing quarterly reports from this past year on volume of patients who
did not show up to their appointments, to the volume of patients of
the previous year, who did not show up to their appointments, to see if the
automated system has proven effective. She is considering other variables as she
reviews the data, but is primarily analyzing the number of "no-show" patients from
last year's quarterly reports to this year's <Ans> time series
5. There are two standard treatments for children with ADHD who display a
specific set of characteristics. One treatment is a cognitive behavioral
intervention, and the other is a dietary and biomedical intervention. Both
treatments have equally strong clinical evidence supporting their efficacy.
A researcher proposes a comparison of the two interventions to determine
, which is preferable. The children will be randomized to one of two groups: half of the
children will receive the cognitive behavioral intervention and the other half of the
children will receive the dietary and biomedical intervention. Which test is
appropriate to determining the preferable treatment <Ans> Cross-sectional
6. The vice president, CMO, and Operations Team collected data on resources used
by patients who have undergone coronary bypass and the length of stays for a
defined population of patients who received CABG surgery. Since the raw data is
complex to discuss and evaluate, the team will use descriptive statistics to analyze
the data to support their decisions for recommendations. Which of the following
descriptive statistics could prove the most useful <Ans> The mean (average) length
of stay and
The mean number of providers seeing each patient each day
7. Operates through CDC; the National Health Care Surveys are designed to
answer key questions of interest to health care policy makers, public health
professionals, and researchers <Ans> National Healthcare Survey
8. Operates through the CDC: data on birth, death, marriages, divorces, and fetal
deaths <Ans> National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS)
9. Incidence and prevalence of diseases, survival statistics, high-risk popula- tions,
trends over time. Data gathered from medical records, surveys, inter- views. NCHS
has responsibility for these databases <Ans> Public Health Databases
10. This database is queried as part of the physician credentialing process when