Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The concept of specific agreement has been proposed for dichotomous outcomes for two and more raters. We aim to extend this concept for variables with more than two ordinal or nominal categories and more than two raters.
STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: We used two data sets: 4 plastic surgeons classifying photographs after breast reconstruction on a 5 point ordinal scale; and 6 raters classifying psychiatric patients into 5 diagnostic categories. For m raters, all (i.e. m(m-1)/2) pairwise agreement tables were summed to calculate the observed agreement, specific agreement and conditional probabilities. The 95% confidence intervals were obtained by bootstrapping.
RESULTS: Specific agreement was calculated for each ordinal or nominal category to examine when one of the raters scored in a specific category, what is the probability that the other raters scored in that same category. And suppose one of the raters scored X1, what is the probability that the other raters scored X1 or any of the other categories (conditional probability). It appeared for example that among the psychiatric disorders, depression and personality disorders were often mixed up, while neurosis was rarely mixed up with schizophrenia.
CONCLUSION: The concept of specific agreement for variables with ordinal and multiple nominal categories provides relevant clinical information. The extension to conditional probabilities of alternative categories broadens the clinical application with examining which categories are most often mixed up.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 47-53 |
Journal | Journal of Clinical Epidemiology |
Volume | 96 |
Early online date | 4 Dec 2017 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Apr 2018 |
Keywords
- Journal Article