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Parameter Estimation and Goodness-of-Fit in Log Binomial Regression

✍ Scribed by L. Blizzard; W. Hosmer


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
248 KB
Volume
48
Category
Article
ISSN
0323-3847

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✦ Synopsis


An estimate of the risk, adjusted for confounders, can be obtained from a fitted logistic regression model, but it substantially over-estimates when the outcome is not rare. The log binomial model, binomial errors and log link, is increasingly being used for this purpose. However this model's performance, goodness of fit tests and case-wise diagnostics have not been studied. Extensive simulations are used to compare the performance of the log binomial, a logistic regression based method proposed by and a Poisson regression approach proposed by Carter, Lipsitz, and. Log binomial regression resulted in "failure" rates (non-convergence, out-of-bounds predicted probabilities) as high as 59%. Estimates by the method of produced fitted log binomial probabilities greater than unity in up to 19% of samples to which a log binomial model had been successfully fit and in up to 78% of samples when the log binomial model fit failed. Similar percentages were observed for the Poisson regression approach. Coefficient and standard error estimates from the three models were similar. Rejection rates for goodness of fit tests for log binomial fit were around 5%. Power of goodness of fit tests was modest when an incorrect logistic regression model was fit. Examples demonstrate the use of the methods. Uncritical use of the log binomial regression model is not recommended


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