Constructing Empirical Likelihood Confidence Intervals for Medical Cost Data with Censored Observations

Medical cost analysis is an important part of treatment evaluation. Since resources are limited in society, it is important new treatments are developed with proper costconsiderations. The mean has been mostly accepted as a measure of the medical cost analysis. However, it is well known that cost da...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jeyarajah, Jenny Vennukkah
Format: Others
Published: ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarworks.gsu.edu/math_diss/38
http://scholarworks.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1041&context=math_diss
id ndltd-GEORGIA-oai-scholarworks.gsu.edu-math_diss-1041
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-GEORGIA-oai-scholarworks.gsu.edu-math_diss-10412016-12-06T15:36:14Z Constructing Empirical Likelihood Confidence Intervals for Medical Cost Data with Censored Observations Jeyarajah, Jenny Vennukkah Medical cost analysis is an important part of treatment evaluation. Since resources are limited in society, it is important new treatments are developed with proper costconsiderations. The mean has been mostly accepted as a measure of the medical cost analysis. However, it is well known that cost data is highly skewed and the mean could be highly influenced by outliers. Therefore, in many situations the mean cost alone cannot offer complete information about medical costs. The quantiles (e.g., the first quartile, median and third quartile) of medical costs could better represent the typical costs paid by a group of individuals, and could provide additional information beyond mean cost. For a specified patient population, cost estimates are generally determined from the beginning of treatments until death or end of the study period. A number of statistical methods have been proposed to estimate medical cost. Since medical cost data are skewed to the right, normal approximation based confidence intervals can have much lower coverage probability than the desired nominal level when the cost data are moderately or severely skewed. Additionally, we note that the variance estimators of the cost estimates are analytically complicated. In order to address some of the above issues, in the first part of the dissertation we propose two empirical likelihood-based confidence intervals for the mean medical costs: One is an empirical likelihood interval (ELI) based on influence function, the other is a jackknife empirical likelihood (JEL) based interval. We prove that under very general conditions, −2log (empirical likelihood ratio) has an asymptotic standard chi squared distribution with one degree of freedom for mean medical cost. Also we show that the log-jackknife empirical likelihood ratio statistics follow standard χ2 distribution with one degree of freedom for mean medical cost. In the second part of the dissertation, we propose an influence function-based empirical likelihood method to construct a confidence region for the vector of regression parameters in mean cost regression models with censored data. The proposed confidence region can be used to obtain a confidence interval for the expected total cost of a patient with given covariates. The new method has sound asymptotic property (Wilks Theorem). In the third part of the dissertation we propose empirical likelihood method based on influence function to construct confidence intervals for quantile medical costs with censored data. We prove that under very general conditions, −2log (empirical likelihood ratio) has an asymptotic standard chi squared distribution with one degree of freedom for quantile medical cost. Simulation studies are conducted to compare coverage probabilities and interval lengths of the proposed confidence intervals with the existing confidence intervals. The proposed methods are observed to have better finite sample performances than existing methods. The new methods are also illustrated through a real example. 2016-12-15T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarworks.gsu.edu/math_diss/38 http://scholarworks.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1041&context=math_diss Mathematics Dissertations ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University Medical cost Empirical likelihood Influence function Jackknife Median cost Mean cost
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Medical cost
Empirical likelihood
Influence function
Jackknife
Median cost
Mean cost
spellingShingle Medical cost
Empirical likelihood
Influence function
Jackknife
Median cost
Mean cost
Jeyarajah, Jenny Vennukkah
Constructing Empirical Likelihood Confidence Intervals for Medical Cost Data with Censored Observations
description Medical cost analysis is an important part of treatment evaluation. Since resources are limited in society, it is important new treatments are developed with proper costconsiderations. The mean has been mostly accepted as a measure of the medical cost analysis. However, it is well known that cost data is highly skewed and the mean could be highly influenced by outliers. Therefore, in many situations the mean cost alone cannot offer complete information about medical costs. The quantiles (e.g., the first quartile, median and third quartile) of medical costs could better represent the typical costs paid by a group of individuals, and could provide additional information beyond mean cost. For a specified patient population, cost estimates are generally determined from the beginning of treatments until death or end of the study period. A number of statistical methods have been proposed to estimate medical cost. Since medical cost data are skewed to the right, normal approximation based confidence intervals can have much lower coverage probability than the desired nominal level when the cost data are moderately or severely skewed. Additionally, we note that the variance estimators of the cost estimates are analytically complicated. In order to address some of the above issues, in the first part of the dissertation we propose two empirical likelihood-based confidence intervals for the mean medical costs: One is an empirical likelihood interval (ELI) based on influence function, the other is a jackknife empirical likelihood (JEL) based interval. We prove that under very general conditions, −2log (empirical likelihood ratio) has an asymptotic standard chi squared distribution with one degree of freedom for mean medical cost. Also we show that the log-jackknife empirical likelihood ratio statistics follow standard χ2 distribution with one degree of freedom for mean medical cost. In the second part of the dissertation, we propose an influence function-based empirical likelihood method to construct a confidence region for the vector of regression parameters in mean cost regression models with censored data. The proposed confidence region can be used to obtain a confidence interval for the expected total cost of a patient with given covariates. The new method has sound asymptotic property (Wilks Theorem). In the third part of the dissertation we propose empirical likelihood method based on influence function to construct confidence intervals for quantile medical costs with censored data. We prove that under very general conditions, −2log (empirical likelihood ratio) has an asymptotic standard chi squared distribution with one degree of freedom for quantile medical cost. Simulation studies are conducted to compare coverage probabilities and interval lengths of the proposed confidence intervals with the existing confidence intervals. The proposed methods are observed to have better finite sample performances than existing methods. The new methods are also illustrated through a real example.
author Jeyarajah, Jenny Vennukkah
author_facet Jeyarajah, Jenny Vennukkah
author_sort Jeyarajah, Jenny Vennukkah
title Constructing Empirical Likelihood Confidence Intervals for Medical Cost Data with Censored Observations
title_short Constructing Empirical Likelihood Confidence Intervals for Medical Cost Data with Censored Observations
title_full Constructing Empirical Likelihood Confidence Intervals for Medical Cost Data with Censored Observations
title_fullStr Constructing Empirical Likelihood Confidence Intervals for Medical Cost Data with Censored Observations
title_full_unstemmed Constructing Empirical Likelihood Confidence Intervals for Medical Cost Data with Censored Observations
title_sort constructing empirical likelihood confidence intervals for medical cost data with censored observations
publisher ScholarWorks @ Georgia State University
publishDate 2016
url http://scholarworks.gsu.edu/math_diss/38
http://scholarworks.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1041&context=math_diss
work_keys_str_mv AT jeyarajahjennyvennukkah constructingempiricallikelihoodconfidenceintervalsformedicalcostdatawithcensoredobservations
_version_ 1718398631432683520