[Solved] In a study of intra-observer variability in the assessment of cervical smears, 3325 slides were screened for the presence or absence of abnormal
Question: In a study of intra-observer variability in the assessment of cervical smears, 3325 slides were screened for the presence or absence of abnormal squamous cells.
Each slide was screened by a particular observer and then re-screened six months later by the same observer. The slides were coded so the screener was "blind" to the fact that the same slides were submitted for review a second time.
The results of this study are abstracted in Table Question 1.
Intra-observer assessment in two readings of the same slides by the same reader with a time interval of 6 months.
| First Screening | Second Screening | Total | |
| Present | Absent | ||
| Present | 1765 | 487 | 2252 |
| Absent | 400 | 673 | 1073 |
| Total | 2165 | 1160 | 3325 |
- In the study design employed, what kind of Chi Square test is appropriate to examine the question of intra-observer reliability? Note: we had two different applications of the Chi-Square to analyze data from independent and non-dependent designs.
- Carry out the appropriate Chi-Square test to examine the question whether the data support the null hypothesis that there is no association (consistency) between the observers screening diagnosis results over the two time periods.
- From the point of view of intra-observer reliability. If the data indicates that you accept the null hypothesis, is this a "good result" in terms of diagnostic outcome or not?
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