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  2. Proportional hazards model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proportional_hazards_model

    a 8.3x higher risk of death does not mean that 8.3x more patients will die in hospital A: survival analysis examines how quickly events occur, not simply whether they occur. More specifically, "risk of death" is a measure of a rate. A rate has units, like meters per second.

  3. Survival function - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Survival_function

    The survival function is also known as the survivor function [2] or reliability function. [3] The term reliability function is common in engineering while the term survival function is used in a broader range of applications, including human mortality. The survival function is the complementary cumulative distribution function of the lifetime ...

  4. Survival analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Survival_analysis

    This topic is called reliability theory, reliability analysis or reliability engineering in engineering, duration analysis or duration modelling in economics, and event history analysis in sociology. Survival analysis attempts to answer certain questions, such as what is the proportion of a population which will survive past a certain time?

  5. Kaplan–Meier estimator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaplan–Meier_estimator

    An example of a Kaplan–Meier plot for two conditions associated with patient survival. The Kaplan–Meier estimator, [1] [2] also known as the product limit estimator, is a non-parametric statistic used to estimate the survival function from lifetime data.

  6. Bayesian survival analysis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bayesian_survival_analysis

    Survival analysis is normally carried out using parametric models, semi-parametric models, non-parametric models to estimate the survival rate in clinical research. However recently Bayesian models [1] are also used to estimate the survival rate due to their ability to handle design and analysis issues in clinical research.

  7. Life table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_table

    This is particularly the case in non-life insurance (e.g. the pricing of motor insurance can allow for a large number of risk factors, which requires a correspondingly complex table of expected claim rates). However the expression "life table" normally refers to human survival rates and is not relevant to non-life insurance.

  8. Relative survival - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relative_survival

    The relative survival form of analysis is more complex than "competing risks" but is considered the gold-standard for performing a cause-specific survival analysis. It is based on two rates: the overall hazard rate observed in a diseased population and the background or expected hazard rate in the general or background population.

  9. Critical illness insurance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_illness_insurance

    Critical illness insurance, otherwise known as critical illness cover or a dread disease policy, is an insurance product in which the insurer is contracted to typically make a lump sum cash payment if the policyholder is diagnosed with one of the specific illnesses on a predetermined list as part of an insurance policy.