18 results on '"D. Andrich"'
Search Results
2. BAERLIN2014 – the influence of land surface types on and the horizontal heterogeneity of air pollutant levels in Berlin
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B. Bonn, E. von Schneidemesser, D. Andrich, J. Quedenau, H. Gerwig, A. Lüdecke, J. Kura, A. Pietsch, C. Ehlers, D. Klemp, C. Kofahl, R. Nothard, A. Kerschbaumer, W. Junkermann, R. Grote, T. Pohl, K. Weber, B. Lode, P. Schönberger, G. Churkina, T. M. Butler, and M. G. Lawrence
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Physics ,QC1-999 ,Chemistry ,QD1-999 - Abstract
Urban air quality and human health are among the key aspects of future urban planning. In order to address pollutants such as ozone and particulate matter, efforts need to be made to quantify and reduce their concentrations. One important aspect in understanding urban air quality is the influence of urban vegetation which may act as both emitter and sink for trace gases and aerosol particles. In this context, the "Berlin Air quality and Ecosystem Research: Local and long-range Impact of anthropogenic and Natural hydrocarbons 2014" (BAERLIN2014) campaign was conducted between 2 June and 29 August in the metropolitan area of Berlin and Brandenburg, Germany. The predominant goals of the campaign were (1) the characterization of urban gaseous and particulate pollution and its attribution to anthropogenic and natural sources in the region of interest, especially considering the connection between biogenic volatile organic compounds and particulates and ozone; (2) the quantification of the impact of urban vegetation on organic trace gas levels and the presence of oxidants such as ozone; and (3) to explain the local heterogeneity of pollutants by defining the distribution of sources and sinks relevant for the interpretation of model simulations. In order to do so, the campaign included stationary measurements at urban background station and mobile observations carried out from bicycle, van and airborne platforms. This paper provides an overview of the mobile measurements (Mobile BAERLIN2014) and general conclusions drawn from the analysis. Bicycle measurements showed micro-scale variations of temperature and particulate matter, displaying a substantial reduction of mean temperatures and particulate levels in the proximity of vegetated areas compared to typical urban residential area (background) measurements. Van measurements extended the area covered by bicycle observations and included continuous measurements of O3, NOx, CO, CO2 and point-wise measurement of volatile organic compounds (VOCs) at representative sites for traffic- and vegetation-affected sites. The quantification displayed notable horizontal heterogeneity of the short-lived gases and particle number concentrations. For example, baseline concentrations of the traffic-related chemical species CO and NO varied on average by up to ±22.2 and ±63.5 %, respectively, on the scale of 100 m around any measurement location. Airborne observations revealed the dominant source of elevated urban particulate number and mass concentrations being local, i.e., not being caused by long-range transport. Surface-based observations related these two parameters predominantly to traffic sources. Vegetated areas lowered the pollutant concentrations substantially with ozone being reduced most by coniferous forests, which is most likely caused by their reactive biogenic VOC emissions. With respect to the overall potential to reduce air pollutant levels, forests were found to result in the largest decrease, followed by parks and facilities for sports and leisure. Surface temperature was generally 0.6–2.1 °C lower in vegetated regions, which in turn will have an impact on tropospheric chemical processes. Based on our findings, effective future mitigation activities to provide a more sustainable and healthier urban environment should focus predominantly on reducing fossil-fuel emissions from traffic as well as on increasing vegetated areas.
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- 2016
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3. A cohort study of 30 day mortality after NON-EMERGENCY surgery in a COVID-19 cold site
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Anthony Mundy, Mahreen Pakzad, Konstantinos Kapriniotis, David Walker, Senthil Nathan, Tomasz Kurzawinski, Simon Clarke, Maxine G. B. Tran, Julie Jenks, Clare Allen, Tarek Ezzatt Abdel-Aziz, Manish Chand, Axel Bex, Daniel Heffernan Ho, Clement Orczyk, Vimoshan Arumuham, Tim Briggs, Jamie Lindsay, D. Andrich, Pippa Sangster, Jonathan McCullough, Alistair Grey, Nim Christopher, Rosie Batty, James Moore, David Ralph, Tamsin Greenwell, Georgios Kazantzis, James Crosbie, Anand Kelkar, Fares S. Haddad, David Lawrence, Lois Roberts, Bilal Syed, Simon Choong, Ahmed Elhamshary, Jeremy Ockrim, Davor Jurkovic, Davide Patrini, Robert May, Eleanor Brockbank, John D. Kelly, Tim Mould, Konstantinos Doufekas, Dan Wood, Mark Feneley, Christopher Wood, Arjun Jeyarajah, Ravi Barod, Chetan Bhan, Sofoklis Mitsos, John Hines, Tommy Rampling, Douglas Pendse, Robert Nicolae, Prasad Patki, Justin Collins, Hussain M. Alnajjar, Martin Hayward, Prasanna Sooriakumaran, Louise Dickinson, Adeola Olaitan, Ashwin Sridhar, Naaila Aslam, Sara Rakshani-Moghadam, Sian Allen, Chi-Ying Li, Ioannis C. Kotsopoulos, Geoff Bellingan, Prabhakar Rajan, Tom Strange, Caroline M. Moore, N MacDonald, Jennifer L. Rohn, Veeru Kasivisvanathan, Daron Smith, Rizwan Hamid, Nikolaos Panagiotopoulos, Saurabh Phadnis, Asif Muneer, Dimitrios Volanis, and Greg Shaw
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Cold site ,Network ,State Medicine ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Primary outcome ,Postoperative Complications ,Emergency surgery ,Oncology Service, Hospital ,Pandemic ,medicine ,Humans ,Hospital Mortality ,Mortality ,Pandemics ,Cancer ,Aged ,business.industry ,SARS-CoV-2 ,General surgery ,COVID-19 ,General Medicine ,Prospective Cohort Study ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,National health service ,United Kingdom ,30 day mortality ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Female ,Surgery ,Safety ,business ,Surgery Department, Hospital ,Cohort study - Abstract
Background Two million non-emergency surgeries are being cancelled globally every week due to the COVID-19 pandemic, which will have a major impact on patients and healthcare systems. Methods During the peak of the pandemic in the United Kingdom, we set up a multicentre cancer network amongst 14 National Health Service institutions, performing urological, thoracic, gynaecological and general surgical urgent and cancer operations at a central COVID-19 cold site. This is a cohort study of 500 consecutive patients undergoing surgery in this network. The primary outcome was 30-day mortality from COVID-19. Secondary outcomes included all-cause mortality and post-operative complications at 30-days. Results 500 patients underwent surgery with median age 62.5 (IQR 51–71). 65% were male, 60% had a known diagnosis of cancer and 61% of surgeries were considered complex or major. No patient died from COVID-19 at 30-days. 30-day all-cause mortality was 3/500 (1%). 10 (2%) patients were diagnosed with COVID-19, 4 (1%) with confirmed laboratory diagnosis and 6 (1%) with probable COVID-19. 33/500 (7%) of patients developed Clavien-Dindo grade 3 or higher complications, with 1/33 (3%) occurring in a patient with COVID-19. Conclusion It is safe to continue cancer and urgent surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic with appropriate service reconfiguration., Highlights • Priority surgeries are being cancelled every week due to the COVID-19 pandemic. • A multicentre surgical referral network was set up as part of an NHS England approach to continuing safe surgery • The referral network consisted of 14 NHS trusts and surgery was performed at a single COVID-19 ‘cold site’. • After 500 surgeries performed, there was a 0% 30-day mortality from COVID-19. • It is safe to continue cancer and priority surgery during the COVID-19 pandemic with appropriate service reconfiguration.
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- 2020
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4. Anastomotic urethral reconstruction of a traumatic fall-astride urethral stricture after TURP – troubleshooting, tips & tricks on how to achieve a successful repair
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H. John, M. Tutal, D. Andrich, and K. Horton
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Urethral stricture ,business.industry ,Urology ,Troubleshooting ,Anastomosis ,lcsh:Diseases of the genitourinary system. Urology ,lcsh:RC870-923 ,lcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogens ,medicine.disease ,lcsh:RC254-282 ,Surgery ,medicine ,business - Published
- 2020
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5. Surgical treatment for recurrent bulbar urethral stricture: A randomised open label superiority trial of open urethroplasty versus endoscopic urethrotomy (The OPEN Trial)
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B. Goulao, S. Carnell, J. Shen, G. MacLennan, J. Norrie, J. Cook, E. McColl, M. Breckons, L. Vale, R. Forbes, S. Currer, M. Forrest, J. Wilkinson, D. Andrich, S. Barclay, A. Munday, J. N’Dow, S. Payne, N. Watkin, and R. Pickard
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Urology - Published
- 2019
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6. Supplementary material to 'BAERLIN2014 – The influence of land surface types on and the horizontal heterogeneity of air pollutant levels in Berlin'
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B. Bonn, E. von Schneidemesser, D. Andrich, J. Quedenau, H. Gerwig, A. Lüdecke, J. Kura, A. Pietsch, C. Ehlers, D. Klemp, C. Kofahl, R. Nothard, A. Kerschbaumer, W. Junkermann, R. Grote, T. Pohl, K. Weber, B. Lode, P. Schönberger, G. Churkina, T. M. Butler, and M. G. Lawrence
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- 2016
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7. Early outcomes for the first patients within a 2-arm randomized and parallel Sling-versus-Sphincter feasibility protocol
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Rizwan Hamid, D. Andrich, Antoine Kass-Iliyya, Jeremy Ockrim, Ishaan Chaudhury, Tamsin Greenwell, and Julian Shah
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Sling (implant) ,business.industry ,medicine ,Sphincter ,Surgery ,General Medicine ,business - Published
- 2014
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8. Retrograde leak point pressure correlates with 24 h pad weight for assessing post prostatectomy incontinence
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Rizwan Hamid, Ishaan Chaudhury, Eskinder Solomon, Antoine Kass-Iliyya, Tamsin Greenwell, Ockrim L. Jeremy, and D. Andrich
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Prostatectomy ,Urinary retention ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Brachytherapy ,Urinary incontinence ,General Medicine ,Surgery ,Bladder outlet obstruction ,medicine ,External beam radiotherapy ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Prospective cohort study ,Prostate brachytherapy - Abstract
s / International Journal of Surgery 12 (2014) S13eS117 S106 Results: 111 patients were assessed; only 63 patients were eligible for randomization (exclusions radiotherapy 38, severe SUI 20 patients). 10 patients agreed to be randomized (16%); 53 patients declined randomization. Three-month follow-up data is currently available on 36 patients. 17/20 (85%) patients treated by sling were cured or significantly improved; all but one with pad weight > 400mls. 3 patients (pad weight 143,500,890mls) were not improved. 14/16 (87.5%) patients treated by AUS were cured or significantly improved; eleven (69%) had severe SUI and six (37.5%) radiotherapy. 2 AUS patients were not improved (bladder over activity, pad weight 1100mls) Conclusions: AUS satisfaction rates were similar to sling. 0787: RETROGRADE LEAK POINT PRESSURE CORRELATES WITH 24 H PAD WEIGHT FOR ASSESSING POST PROSTATECTOMY INCONTINENCE Antoine Kass-Iliyya , Eskinder Solomon, Ishaan Chaudhury, Rizwan Hamid, Daniella E. Andrich, Tamsin J. Greenwell, Ockrim L. Jeremy. University College London Hospital, London, UK. Introduction: Twenty-four hour pad-weight is the standard measurement of stress urinary incontinence (SUI) in men after radical prostatectomy. Poor patient compliance, variability according to patients’ activity and fluid intake represent major disadvantages in reliability of this test. Retrograde leak point pressure (RLPP) measurement is a simple adjunct to urodynamic assessment and gives an objective measure of external urethral sphincter’s closure pressure. We evaluated the correlation between RLPP and 24h pad weight within a randomized study setting. Methods: 53 consecutive men between February-October 2013 were evaluated for surgical intervention. Patients collected 24h pad tests in two separate periods and the mean calculated. Severe incontinence was considered pad weight >400mls. RLPP were performed using a standardized and reproducible (Comiter) technique using a paediatric cuff and 5ml/min perfusion rate. The pressure plateau reached when the sphincter pressure was exceeded was recorded. Results: Mean 24h pad weight was 402±425 mls (range 9-3500), and mean retrograde leak point pressure was 35.7±15.3cm water (range 1283). The degree of individual pad weight variability was not significant. Patients with higher pad weights had significantly lower RLPP measurements, Spearman’s correlation coefficient r1⁄40.59, p
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- 2014
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9. On an identity between the Gaussian and Rasch measurement error distributions: making the role of the instrument explicit.
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D Andrich
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- 2018
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10. Open urethroplasty versus endoscopic urethrotomy for recurrent urethral stricture in men: the OPEN RCT.
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Pickard R, Goulao B, Carnell S, Shen J, MacLennan G, Norrie J, Breckons M, Vale L, Whybrow P, Rapley T, Forbes R, Currer S, Forrest M, Wilkinson J, McColl E, Andrich D, Barclay S, Cook J, Mundy A, N'Dow J, Payne S, and Watkin N
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- Adult, Aged, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Endoscopy adverse effects, Endoscopy economics, Endoscopy methods, Humans, Interviews as Topic, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Economic, Quality of Life, Quality-Adjusted Life Years, State Medicine, Technology Assessment, Biomedical, United Kingdom, Urologic Surgical Procedures, Male adverse effects, Urethral Stricture surgery, Urologic Surgical Procedures, Male economics, Urologic Surgical Procedures, Male methods
- Abstract
Background: Men who suffer recurrence of bulbar urethral stricture have to decide between endoscopic urethrotomy and open urethroplasty to manage their urinary symptoms. Evidence of relative clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness is lacking., Objectives: To assess benefit, harms and cost-effectiveness of open urethroplasty compared with endoscopic urethrotomy as treatment for recurrent urethral stricture in men., Design: Parallel-group, open-label, patient-randomised trial of allocated intervention with 6-monthly follow-ups over 24 months. Target sample size was 210 participants providing outcome data. Participants, clinicians and local research staff could not be blinded to allocation. Central trial staff were blinded when needed., Setting: UK NHS with recruitment from 38 hospital sites., Participants: A total of 222 men requiring operative treatment for recurrence of bulbar urethral stricture who had received at least one previous intervention for stricture., Interventions: A centralised randomisation system using random blocks allocated participants 1 : 1 to open urethroplasty (experimental group) or endoscopic urethrotomy (control group)., Main Outcome Measures: The primary clinical outcome was control of urinary symptoms. Cost-effectiveness was assessed by cost per quality-adjusted life-year (QALY) gained over 24 months. The main secondary outcome was the need for reintervention for stricture recurrence., Results: The mean difference in the area under the curve of repeated measurement of voiding symptoms scored from 0 (no symptoms) to 24 (severe symptoms) between the two groups was -0.36 [95% confidence interval (CI) -1.78 to 1.02; p = 0.6]. Mean voiding symptom scores improved between baseline and 24 months after randomisation from 13.4 [standard deviation (SD) 4.5] to 6 (SD 5.5) for urethroplasty group and from 13.2 (SD 4.7) to 6.4 (SD 5.3) for urethrotomy. Reintervention was less frequent and occurred earlier in the urethroplasty group (hazard ratio 0.52, 95% CI 0.31 to 0.89; p = 0.02). There were two postoperative complications requiring reinterventions in the group that received urethroplasty and five, including one death from pulmonary embolism, in the group that received urethrotomy. Over 24 months, urethroplasty cost on average more than urethrotomy (cost difference £2148, 95% CI £689 to £3606) and resulted in a similar number of QALYs (QALY difference -0.01, 95% CI -0.17 to 0.14). Therefore, based on current evidence, urethrotomy is considered to be cost-effective., Limitations: We were able to include only 69 (63%) of the 109 men allocated to urethroplasty and 90 (80%) of the 113 men allocated to urethrotomy in the primary complete-case intention-to-treat analysis., Conclusions: The similar magnitude of symptom improvement seen for the two procedures over 24 months of follow-up shows that both provide effective symptom control. The lower likelihood of further intervention favours urethroplasty, but this had a higher cost over the 24 months of follow-up and was unlikely to be considered cost-effective., Future Work: Formulate methods to incorporate short-term disutility data into cost-effectiveness analysis. Survey pathways of care for men with urethral stricture, including the use of enhanced recovery after urethroplasty. Establish a pragmatic follow-up schedule to allow national audit of outcomes following urethral surgery with linkage to NHS Hospital Episode Statistics., Trial Registration: Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN98009168., Funding: This project was funded by the NIHR Health Technology Assessment programme and will be published in full in Health Technology Assessment ; Vol. 24, No. 61. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
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- 2020
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11. A Law of Comparative Preference: Distinctions Between Models of Personal Preference and Impersonal Judgment in Pair Comparison Designs.
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Andrich D and Luo G
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The pair comparison design for distinguishing between stimuli located on the same natural or hypothesized linear continuum is used both when the response is a personal preference and when it is an impersonal judgment. Appropriate models which complement the different responses have been proposed. However, the models most appropriate for impersonal judgments have also been described as modeling choice, which may imply personal preference. This leads to potential confusion in interpretation of scale estimates of the stimuli, in particular whether they reflect a substantive order on the variable or reflect a characteristic of the sample which is different from the substantive order on the variable. Using Thurstone's concept of a discriminal response when a person engages with each stimulus, this article explains the overlapping and distinctive relationships between models for pair comparison designs when used for preference and judgment. In doing so, it exploits the properties of the relatively new hyperbolic cosine model which is not only appropriate for modeling personal preferences but has an explicit mathematical relationship with models for impersonal judgments. The hyperbolic cosine model is shown to be a special case of a more general form, referred to in parallel with Thurstone's Law of Comparative Judgment, as a specific law of comparative preference . Analyses of two real data sets illustrate the differences between the models most appropriate for personal preferences and impersonal judgments in a pair comparison design., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting Interests: The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2019
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12. Recent advances in analysis of differential item functioning in health research using the Rasch model.
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Hagquist C and Andrich D
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- Analysis of Variance, Child, Female, Humans, Male, Psychometrics, Psychophysiologic Disorders psychology, Reproducibility of Results, Surveys and Questionnaires, Sweden, Outcome Assessment, Health Care methods, Quality of Life
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Background: Rasch analysis with a focus on Differential Item Functioning (DIF) is increasingly used for examination of psychometric properties of health outcome measures. To take account of DIF in order to retain precision of measurement, split of DIF-items into separate sample specific items has become a frequently used technique. The purpose of the paper is to present and summarise recent advances of analysis of DIF in a unified methodology. In particular, the paper focuses on the use of analysis of variance (ANOVA) as a method to simultaneously detect uniform and non-uniform DIF, the need to distinguish between real and artificial DIF and the trade-off between reliability and validity. An illustrative example from health research is used to demonstrate how DIF, in this case between genders, can be identified, quantified and under specific circumstances accounted for using the Rasch model., Methods: Rasch analyses of DIF were conducted of a composite measure of psychosomatic problems using Swedish data from the Health Behaviour in School-aged Children study for grade 9 students collected during the 1985-2014 time periods., Results: The procedures demonstrate how DIF can be identified efficiently by ANOVA of residuals, and how the magnitude of DIF can be quantified and potentially accounted for by resolving items according to identifiable groups and using principles of test equating on the resolved items. The results of the analysis also show that the real DIF in some items does affect person measurement estimates., Conclusions: Firstly, in order to distinguish between real and artificial DIF, the items showing DIF initially should not be resolved simultaneously but sequentially. Secondly, while resolving instead of deleting a DIF item may retain reliability, both options may affect the content validity negatively. Resolving items with DIF is not justified if the source of the DIF is relevant for the content of the variable; then resolving DIF may deteriorate the validity of the instrument. Generally, decisions on resolving items to deal with DIF should also rely on external information.
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- 2017
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13. Georg Rasch and Benjamin Wright's Struggle With the Unidimensional Polytomous Model With Sufficient Statistics.
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Andrich D
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This article reproduces correspondence between Georg Rasch of The University of Copenhagen and Benjamin Wright of The University of Chicago in the period from January 1966 to July 1967. This correspondence reveals their struggle to operationalize a unidimensional measurement model with sufficient statistics for responses in a set of ordered categories. The article then explains the original approach taken by Rasch, Wright, and Andersen, and then how, from a different tack originating in 1961 and culminating in 1978, three distinct stages of development led to the current relatively simple and elegant form of the model. The article shows that over this period of almost two decades, the demand for sufficiency of a unidimensional parameter of the object of measurement, which enabled the separation of this parameter from the parameter of the instrument, drove the theoretical development of the model., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting Interests: The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2016
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14. Controlling Guessing Bias in the Dichotomous Rasch Model Applied to a Large-Scale, Vertically Scaled Testing Program.
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Andrich D, Marais I, and Humphry SM
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Recent research has shown how the statistical bias in Rasch model difficulty estimates induced by guessing in multiple-choice items can be eliminated. Using vertical scaling of a high-profile national reading test, it is shown that the dominant effect of removing such bias is a nonlinear change in the unit of scale across the continuum. The consequence is that the proficiencies of the more proficient students are increased relative to those of the less proficient. Not controlling the guessing bias underestimates the progress of students across 7 years of schooling with important educational implications., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting Interests: The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2016
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15. Real and Artificial Differential Item Functioning in Polytomous Items.
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Andrich D and Hagquist C
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Differential item functioning (DIF) for an item between two groups is present if, for the same person location on a variable, persons from different groups have different expected values for their responses. Applying only to dichotomously scored items in the popular Mantel-Haenszel (MH) method for detecting DIF in which persons are classified by their total scores on an instrument, Andrich and Hagquist articulated the concept of artificial DIF and showed that as an artifact of the MH method, real DIF in one item favoring one group inevitably induces artificial DIF favoring the other group in all other items. Using the dichotomous Rasch model in which the total score for a person is a sufficient statistic, and therefore justifies classifying persons by their total scores, Andrich and Hagquist showed that to distinguish between real and artificial DIF in an item identified by the MH method, a sequential procedure for resolving items is implied. Using the polytomous Rasch model, this article generalizes the concept of artificial DIF to polytomous items, in which multiple item parameters play a role. The article shows that the same principle of resolving items sequentially as with dichotomous items applies also to distinguishing between real and artificial DIF with polytomous items. A real example and a small simulated example that parallels the real example are used illustratively., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting Interests: The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2015
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16. Practice effects in medical school entrance testing with the undergraduate medicine and health sciences admission test (UMAT).
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Puddey IB, Mercer A, Andrich D, and Styles I
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- Adolescent, Australia, Education, Medical, Undergraduate, Female, Humans, Male, New Zealand, Regression Analysis, School Admission Criteria, Socioeconomic Factors, Young Adult, College Admission Test, Practice, Psychological, Schools, Medical, Schools, Public Health
- Abstract
Background: The UMAT is widely used for selection into undergraduate medical and dental courses in Australia and New Zealand (NZ). It tests aptitudes thought to be especially relevant to medical studies and consists of 3 sections - logical reasoning and problem solving (UMAT-1), understanding people (UMAT-2) and non-verbal reasoning (UMAT-3). A substantial proportion of all candidates re-sit the UMAT. Re-sitting raises the issue as to what might be the precise magnitude and determinants of any practice effects on the UMAT and their implications for equity in subsequent selection processes., Methods: Between 2000 and 2012, 158,909 UMAT assessments were completed. From these, 135,833 cases were identified where a candidate had sat once or more during that period with 117,505 cases (86.5%) having sat once, 14,739 having sat twice (10.9%), 2,752 thrice (2%) and 837, 4 or more times (0.6%). Subsequent analyses determined predictors of multiple re-sits as well as the magnitude and socio-demographic determinants of any practice effects., Results: Increased likelihood of re-sitting the UMAT twice or more was predicted by being male, of younger age, being from a non-English language speaking background and being from NZ and for Australian candidates, being urban rather than rurally based. For those who sat at least twice, the total UMAT score between a first and second attempt improved by 10.7 ± 0.2 percentiles, UMAT-1 by 8.3 ± 0.2 percentiles, UMAT-2 by 8.3 ± 0.2 percentiles and UMAT-3 by 7.7 ± 0.2 percentiles. An increase in total UMAT percentile score on re-testing was predicted by a lower initial score and being a candidate from NZ rather than from Australia while a decrease was related to increased length of time since initially sitting the test, older age and non-English language background., Conclusions: Re-sitting the UMAT augments performance in each of its components together with the total UMAT percentile score. Whether this increase represents just an improvement in performance or an improvement in understanding of the variables and therefore competence needs to be further defined. If only the former, then practice effects may be introducing inequity in student selection for medical or dental schools in Australia or NZ.
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- 2014
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17. Using item response theory to explore the psychometric properties of extended matching questions examination in undergraduate medical education.
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Bhakta B, Tennant A, Horton M, Lawton G, and Andrich D
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- Adult, Algorithms, Calibration, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Education, Medical, Undergraduate methods, Educational Measurement methods, Educational Measurement statistics & numerical data, Humans, Medicine classification, Probability, Schools, Medical, Specialties, Surgical classification, Western Australia, Clinical Competence statistics & numerical data, Education, Medical, Education, Medical, Undergraduate standards, Educational Measurement standards, Models, Statistical, Psychometrics, Specialization, Specialties, Surgical education
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Background: As assessment has been shown to direct learning, it is critical that the examinations developed to test clinical competence in medical undergraduates are valid and reliable. The use of extended matching questions (EMQ) has been advocated to overcome some of the criticisms of using multiple-choice questions to test factual and applied knowledge., Methods: We analysed the results from the Extended Matching Questions Examination taken by 4th year undergraduate medical students in the academic year 2001 to 2002. Rasch analysis was used to examine whether the set of questions used in the examination mapped on to a unidimensional scale, the degree of difficulty of questions within and between the various medical and surgical specialties and the pattern of responses within individual questions to assess the impact of the distractor options., Results: Analysis of a subset of items and of the full examination demonstrated internal construct validity and the absence of bias on the majority of questions. Three main patterns of response selection were identified., Conclusion: Modern psychometric methods based upon the work of Rasch provide a useful approach to the calibration and analysis of EMQ undergraduate medical assessments. The approach allows for a formal test of the unidimensionality of the questions and thus the validity of the summed score. Given the metric calibration which follows fit to the model, it also allows for the establishment of items banks to facilitate continuity and equity in exam standards.
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- 2005
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18. Controversy and the Rasch model: a characteristic of incompatible paradigms?
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Andrich D
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- Education statistics & numerical data, Health Services Research standards, Health Services Research statistics & numerical data, Humans, Outcome Assessment, Health Care standards, Outcome Assessment, Health Care statistics & numerical data, Reproducibility of Results, Social Sciences statistics & numerical data, United States, Health Services Research methods, Models, Theoretical, Outcome Assessment, Health Care methods, Probability, Psychometrics methods
- Abstract
The development of Rasch models in educational and psychologic measurement in the 1960s coincided with the introduction of other similar models, now described as models of item response theory (IRT). The application of IRT models has now extended to other social sciences, including health. Originally, there was substantial controversy between those who saw Rasch models as simply special cases of IRT models and those who saw them as essentially different. Because these different perspectives continue to manifest themselves in various ways, it seems relevant to understand the source of the original controversy. This paper attempts to do so by invoking Kuhn's studies in the history and philosophy of science at 3 levels. First, it suggests that the 2 perspectives reflect Kuhn's concept of legitimate, incompatible paradigms in which controversy is a typical manifestation. Second, because Kuhn recognizes individual histories in the development of paradigms, Rasch's own shift in perspective is summarized. Third, because proponents of the Rasch models emphasize the models' compatibility with fundamental measurement found in physical science, an analogy is made between how Kuhn explains the role of measurement in the physical sciences and how proponents of Rasch models explain the role of these models in the social sciences. In particular, these roles cannot be gleaned from textbooks in science and statistics, respectively.
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- 2004
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