8 research outputs found

    Westchester ASAP Replication

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    MDRC’s RCT evaluation of CUNY’s ASAP found among the largest estimated impacts on credit accumulation and graduation rates of any postsecondary program. The Westchester ASAP Replication, “Viking ROADS”, aims to determine whether CUNY’s ASAP can be replicated at Westchester Community College and whether it will improve academic outcomes for these students. To answer whether Viking ROADS improves academic outcomes, we will estimate the average (across persons) intent-to-treat effect of the program on academic progress and completion through three years after random assignment. Westchester Community College will recruit and enroll about 300 students in fall 2018 and another 300 students in fall 2019, for around 600 students in the study. The study will use a random assignment design to estimate the average causal effect of the opportunity to participate in Viking ROADS

    Causal and associational language in observational health research:a systematic evaluation

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    We estimated the degree to which language used in the high profile medical/public health/epidemiology literature implied causality using language linking exposures to outcomes and action recommendations; examined disconnects between language and recommendations; identified the most common linking phrases; and estimated how strongly linking phrases imply causality. We searched and screened for 1,170 articles from 18 high-profile journals (65 per journal) published from 2010-2019. Based on written framing and systematic guidance, three reviewers rated the degree of causality implied in abstracts and full text for exposure/outcome linking language and action recommendations. Reviewers rated the causal implication of exposure/outcome linking language as None (no causal implication) in 13.8%, Weak 34.2%, Moderate 33.2%, and Strong 18.7% of abstracts. The implied causality of action recommendations was higher than the implied causality of linking sentences for 44.5% or commensurate for 40.3% of articles. The most common linking word in abstracts was "associate" (45.7%). Reviewers’ ratings of linking word roots were highly heterogeneous; over half of reviewers rated "association" as having at least some causal implication

    Identification of seven new prostate cancer susceptibility loci through a genome-wide association study

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    Prostate cancer (PrCa) is the most frequently diagnosed male cancer in developed countries. To identify common PrCa susceptibility alleles, we have previously conducted a genome-wide association study in which 541, 129 SNPs were genotyped in 1,854 PrCa cases with clinically detected disease and 1,894 controls. We have now evaluated promising associations in a second stage, in which we genotyped 43,671 SNPs in 3,650 PrCa cases and 3,940 controls, and a third stage, involving an additional 16,229 cases and 14,821 controls from 21 studies. In addition to previously identified loci, we identified a further seven new prostate cancer susceptibility loci on chromosomes 2, 4, 8, 11, and 22 (P=1.6×10−8 to P=2.7×10−33)
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