Examlex
CASE STUDY 27.9
SO YOU THOUGHT SPINACH WAS GOOD FOR YOU?
For Questions , use the following narrative
Narrative: Case study 27.9 summary
A study published in the New England Journal of Medicine shows that the antioxidant beta-carotene markedly increased the incidence of lung cancer among heavy smokers in Finland.Incidence of lung cancer was 18% higher among the 14,500 smokers who took beta-carotene than among the 14,500 who didn't.The probability that the observed increase was due to chance is less than one in one hundred.(A difference in such studies is taken seriously when the probability that it happened by chance is less than one in twenty.) This result was particularly worrying to researchers and the media, because it comes from a large, randomized clinical trial, yet it goes against all the previously available evidence.Over a hundred epidemiologic studies indicate that people who have high levels of beta-carotene in their diet and in their blood have lower risks of cancer, particularly lung cancer.
-{Case study 27.9 narrative} What type of study was this?
Shovel
A tool typically used for digging, lifting, and moving bulk materials, such as soil, coal, gravel, snow, sand, or ore.
Demand Curve
A graphical representation that shows the relationship between the quantity of a good that consumers are willing to purchase and its price.
Consumers
Individuals or groups who purchase goods and services for personal use and not for manufacturing or resale purposes.
Microeconomic Theory
The study of individual, household, and firm behaviors in decision making and allocation of resources.
Q2: Suppose your test statistic for a two-sided
Q5: {Instant lotto narrative} Interpret what the expected
Q12: _ uses computer models to mimic what
Q14: The word 'significant' is often used to
Q17: Reports are often published that appear to
Q20: Suppose 5% of the people who buy
Q21: Research on college students confirms that they
Q21: The difference in the means of two
Q23: Name two ways in which perceptions of
Q34: {Blood clot risk narrative} The baseline risk