Hi,
I'm re posting this since I didn't get any replies from my Jan 26th post. I hope this is the correct etiquette. Hi, I have 2 variables (veteran rating of suicidality and psychiatrist rating of veteran suicidality) with the same 5 level ordinal rating (n=482). I know that the survey results and the psychiatrist's rating are not independent since they are rating the same entity-the study participant. I am using a combination of methods to examine agreement including: looking at the crosstabs for patterns, calculating proportion of agreement, kappa, ICC, and McNemar. I understand that modeling (specifically conditional logistic regression) can be used and thus potential confounders can be examined. Can this be done in SPSS? If so, I'm confused as to what would be the DV and IV. I have 3 potential confounders. Here is a sample of my data Data List List/ ID Vet_Rate Psych_Rate MD_Type MDE HxSA 1 4 1 1 1 0 2 3 1 2 0 1 3 0 0 1 0 0 4 3 2 1 1 1 5 4 1 1 1 0 etc. ID Vet_Rate= veteran rating of themselves (0-4) Psych_Rate= psychiatrist rating of veteran(0-4) MD_Type= type of psychiatrist (1=resident 2=staff) MDE=presence of depression 0=no 1=yes HxSA=history of suicide attempt 0=no 1=yes Thanks for any help, Jan ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD |
Jan,
I'm sure there are others more knowledgable but here is my thinking. I think that what you'd like to be true is that any third variable has equal relationships with both DVs. Basically, a common cause model. You have three confounders: MD_Type, MDE, HxSA. MDE and HxSA might be used as predictors of current suicidality (ignore MD_type for the moment). Ideally, each and both would have equal relationships with both DVs. You can look at bivariate relationships easily enough. It'd be nice to compare the two resulting statistics much as you might compare two correlations. I don't know how to do that. By the way, note that these are dependent associations because they share a common variable. The best alternative, not available in spss, is to fit a simple three variable path model and constrain the path coefficients to equality. Mplus is the software to use although Lisrel or EQS could do this too. However, because the DVs are categorical, I think the process may be more complicated. I have little experience in this. MD_Type is a different problem. I assume that either a staff or a resident did the MD rating. Thus, MD_Type is a moderator variable. So the question is whether staff rate the same as residents. Again, bivariate techniques will give you insight but not a unified, i.e., single statistic, answer. Perhaps there are ways to compare two independent chi-squares or other categorical stats. I don't know them. The basic analysis here is just a multiple group problem. Again, an Mplus problem but now much more complicated because of the ordinal DV. I'd say the moderator question comes before the common cause question because if you can knock out MD_Type, you can legitimately combine your two MD_Type groups. Even though you could work this a two step problem, you could combine the everything into single path model. So, two groups defined by MD_type. In each group both DVs are predicted by MDE and HxSA. What you want is that the totally constrained model fits as well as the unconstrained model. Gene Maguin Hi, I'm re posting this since I didn't get any replies from my Jan 26th post. I hope this is the correct etiquette. Hi, I have 2 variables (veteran rating of suicidality and psychiatrist rating of veteran suicidality) with the same 5 level ordinal rating (n=482). I know that the survey results and the psychiatrist's rating are not independent since they are rating the same entity-the study participant. I am using a combination of methods to examine agreement including: looking at the crosstabs for patterns, calculating proportion of agreement, kappa, ICC, and McNemar. I understand that modeling (specifically conditional logistic regression) can be used and thus potential confounders can be examined. Can this be done in SPSS? If so, I'm confused as to what would be the DV and IV. I have 3 potential confounders. Here is a sample of my data Data List List/ ID Vet_Rate Psych_Rate MD_Type MDE HxSA 1 4 1 1 1 0 2 3 1 2 0 1 3 0 0 1 0 0 4 3 2 1 1 1 5 4 1 1 1 0 etc. ID Vet_Rate= veteran rating of themselves (0-4) Psych_Rate= psychiatrist rating of veteran(0-4) MD_Type= type of psychiatrist (1=resident 2=staff) MDE=presence of depression 0=no 1=yes HxSA=history of suicide attempt 0=no 1=yes Thanks for any help, Jan ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD |
In reply to this post by J McClure
Hi,
On conditional logistic regression, I can tell you that
version 14.0 and lower cannot run this. But one of the newer versions might have
this capability.
On
your study, what question do you want to answer with your data? This
will better help people understand how to answer.
Carol
From: SPSSX(r) Discussion [mailto:[hidden email]] On Behalf Of J McClure Sent: Sunday, February 06, 2011 12:44 PM To: [hidden email] Subject: Re posting: conditional logistic regression for agreement study I'm re posting this since I didn't get any replies from my Jan 26th post. I hope this is the correct etiquette. Hi, I have 2 variables (veteran rating of suicidality and psychiatrist rating of veteran suicidality) with the same 5 level ordinal rating (n=482). I know that the survey results and the psychiatrist's rating are not independent since they are rating the same entity-the study participant. I am using a combination of methods to examine agreement including: looking at the crosstabs for patterns, calculating proportion of agreement, kappa, ICC, and McNemar. I understand that modeling (specifically conditional logistic regression) can be used and thus potential confounders can be examined. Can this be done in SPSS? If so, I'm confused as to what would be the DV and IV. I have 3 potential confounders. Here is a sample of my data Data List List/ ID Vet_Rate Psych_Rate MD_Type MDE HxSA 1 4 1 1 1 0 2 3 1 2 0 1 3 0 0 1 0 0 4 3 2 1 1 1 5 4 1 1 1 0 etc. ID Vet_Rate= veteran rating of themselves (0-4) Psych_Rate= psychiatrist rating of veteran(0-4) MD_Type= type of psychiatrist (1=resident 2=staff) MDE=presence of depression 0=no 1=yes HxSA=history of suicide attempt 0=no 1=yes Thanks for any help, Jan ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD |
In reply to this post by Maguin, Eugene
Hi Gene,
Thank you for your ideas! I see that MD_Type is an effect moderator and as such needs to be addressed first. Also, I've been so focused on agreement that I haven't looked at bivariate relationships except by stratifying my agreement 'tests' by MD_Type, MDE, HxSA. I'm not at all familiar with path models (yet). Jan On 2/7/2011 7:24 AM, Gene Maguin wrote: > Jan, > > I'm sure there are others more knowledgable but here is my thinking. I think > that what you'd like to be true is that any third variable has equal > relationships with both DVs. Basically, a common cause model. You have three > confounders: MD_Type, MDE, HxSA. MDE and HxSA might be used as predictors of > current suicidality (ignore MD_type for the moment). Ideally, each and both > would have equal relationships with both DVs. You can look at bivariate > relationships easily enough. It'd be nice to compare the two resulting > statistics much as you might compare two correlations. I don't know how to > do that. By the way, note that these are dependent associations because they > share a common variable. The best alternative, not available in spss, is to > fit a simple three variable path model and constrain the path coefficients > to equality. Mplus is the software to use although Lisrel or EQS could do > this too. However, because the DVs are categorical, I think the process may > be more complicated. I have little experience in this. > > MD_Type is a different problem. I assume that either a staff or a resident > did the MD rating. Thus, MD_Type is a moderator variable. So the question is > whether staff rate the same as residents. Again, bivariate techniques will > give you insight but not a unified, i.e., single statistic, answer. Perhaps > there are ways to compare two independent chi-squares or other categorical > stats. I don't know them. The basic analysis here is just a multiple group > problem. Again, an Mplus problem but now much more complicated because of > the ordinal DV. > > I'd say the moderator question comes before the common cause question > because if you can knock out MD_Type, you can legitimately combine your two > MD_Type groups. Even though you could work this a two step problem, you > could combine the everything into single path model. So, two groups defined > by MD_type. In each group both DVs are predicted by MDE and HxSA. What you > want is that the totally constrained model fits as well as the unconstrained > model. > > Gene Maguin > > > > > Hi, > I'm re posting this since I didn't get any replies from my Jan 26th post. I > hope this is the correct etiquette. > > Hi, > I have 2 variables (veteran rating of suicidality and psychiatrist rating of > veteran suicidality) with the same 5 level ordinal rating (n=482). > I know that the survey results and the psychiatrist's rating are not > independent since they are rating the same entity-the study participant. > I am using a combination of methods to examine agreement including: > looking at the crosstabs for patterns, calculating proportion of agreement, > kappa, ICC, and McNemar. > I understand that modeling (specifically conditional logistic regression) > can be used and thus potential confounders can be examined. > Can this be done in SPSS? If so, I'm confused as to what would be the DV and > IV. I have 3 potential confounders. > > Here is a sample of my data > Data List List/ ID Vet_Rate Psych_Rate MD_Type MDE HxSA > 1 4 1 1 1 0 > 2 3 1 2 0 1 > 3 0 0 1 0 0 > 4 3 2 1 1 1 > 5 4 1 1 1 0 > etc. > ID > Vet_Rate= veteran rating of themselves (0-4) > Psych_Rate= psychiatrist rating of veteran(0-4) > MD_Type= type of psychiatrist (1=resident 2=staff) > MDE=presence of depression 0=no 1=yes > HxSA=history of suicide attempt 0=no 1=yes > > Thanks for any help, > Jan ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a > message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text > except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For > a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD > > ===================== > To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to > [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the > command. To leave the list, send the command > SIGNOFF SPSSX-L > For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command > INFO REFCARD > ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD |
In reply to this post by parisec
Hi Carol,
I have version 18 of PASW GradPack. I am looking at agreement between the ratings of suicidal ideation and behaviors by the veteran on a self-administered survey and treating psychiatrist in their clinical note regarding the suicidal ideation and behaviors. I am testing the hypothesis that veterans report more severe suicidal ideation and behaviors than the psychiatrist documents. Suicidal ideation and behaviors is measured by a 5 level ordinal variable that is the same for both the veterans' self rating and the psychiatrist's clinical note. I also want to see if the agreement differs by whether the psychiatrist is a resident or staff (MD_Type), whether the psychiatrist documents a prior history of a suicide attempt (HxSA), and whether the veteran has current major depression (MDE). Thanks for any help. Jan On 2/7/2011 8:49 AM, Parise, Carol A. wrote: ===================== To manage your subscription to SPSSX-L, send a message to [hidden email] (not to SPSSX-L), with no body text except the command. To leave the list, send the command SIGNOFF SPSSX-L For a list of commands to manage subscriptions, send the command INFO REFCARD |
Free forum by Nabble | Edit this page |