Quit Smoking: The New England Journal of Medicine published the results of a double-blind, placebo-controlled experiment to study the effect of nicotine patches and the antidepressant bupropion on quitting smoking. The target for quitting smoking was the 8th day of the experiment. In this experiment researchers randomly assigned smokers to treatments. The following is an excerpt from this same study. “ A total of 311 subjects (34.8 percent) discontinued one or both medications. Seventy-nine subjects stopped treatment because of adverse events: 6 in the placebo group (3.8 percent), 16 in the nicotine-patch group (6.6 percent), 29 in the bupropion group (11.9 percent), and 28 in the combined treatment group (11.4 percent). The most common adverse events were insomnia and headache.” Recall that 160 smokers took the placebo and 244 smokers used nicotine patches. Could the researcher use this data with an inference procedure from this module to test a claim about (or to estimate the difference in) side effects from a placebo compared to nicotine patches?
yes, the % of side effects are large enough to see a difference
yes bc subjects were randomly assigned to treatment groups
no the conditions for use of a normal model sampling distribution of sample differences is not met
no the experiment did not randomly assign side effects
To test a claim about (or to estimate the difference in) side effects from a placebo compared to nicotine patches, each group includes at least 10 successes and 10 failures. Here success denotes having a side effects and failures denotes not having a side effects. For placebo, successes is 6 and failures is 160 - 6 = 154. For nicotine patches, successes is 16 and failure is 244 - 16 = 228. For placebo group, the count of successes is less than 5, so the conditions for use of a normal model sampling distribution of sample differences is not met.
So, the correct option would be
no the conditions for use of a normal model sampling distribution of sample differences is not met
Quit Smoking: The New England Journal of Medicine published the results of a double-blind, placebo-controlled experiment...
Quit Smoking: The New England Journal of Medicine published the results of a double-blind, placebo-controlled experiment to study the effect of nicotine patches and the antidepressant bupropion on quitting smoking. With the data from the experiment we calculate the sample difference in the "quit smoking" rates for the nicotine treatment group and the placebo group ("treatment" minus "placebo"). We get 0.8% = 0.008. Which of the following is an appropriate conclusion based on this finding? A. In this experiment the...
The following is an excerpt from this same study. 'A total of 311 subjects (34.8%) discontinued one or both medications. Seventy-nine subjects stopped treatment because of adverse events: 6 in the placebo group (3.8%), 16 in the nicotine patch group (6.6%), 29 in the bupropion group (11.9%), and 28 in the combined treatment group (11.4%). The most common adverse events were insomnia and headache. "Recall that 160 smokers took the placebo and 244 smokers used nicotine patches. Could the researcher...
You may have to zoom in on a few questions, but I posted the
pictures below-
Quit Smoking: The New England Journal of Medicine published the results of a double-blind, placebo-controlled experiment to study the effect of nicotine patches and the anti-depressant bupropion on quitting smoking. The target for quitting smoking was the 8th day of the experiment. In this experiment researchers randomly assigned smokers to treatments. or the 244 smokers taking the anti-depressant bupropion, 74 stopped smoking by the...
Quit Smoking: Previous studies suggest that use of nicotine-replacement therapies and antidepressants can help people stop smoking. The New England Journal of Medicine published the results of a double-blind, placebo-controlled experiment to study the effect of nicotine patches and the antidepressant bupropion on quitting smoking. The target for quitting smoking was the 8th day of the experiment. In this experiment researchers randomly assigned smokers to treatments. Of the 162 smokers taking a placebo, 28 stopped smoking by the 8th day....
Quit Smoking: Previous studies suggest that use of nicotine-replacement therapies and antidepressants can help people stop smoking. The New England Journal of Medicine published the results of a double-blind, placebo-controlled experiment to study the effect of nicotine patches and the antidepressant bupropion on quitting smoking. The target for quitting smoking was the 8th day of the experiment. In this experiment researchers randomly assigned smokers to treatments. Of the 186 smokers taking a placebo, 28 stopped smoking by the 8th day....
Question 8 Quit Smoking: Previous studies suggest that use of nicotine-replacement Type numbers in the boxes. therapies and antidepressants can help people stop smoking. The New England 10 points Journal of Medicine published the results of a double-blind, placebo-controlled experiment to study the effect of nicotine patches and the antidepressant bupropion on quitting smoking. The target for quitting smoking was the 8th day of the experiment. In this experiment researchers randomly assigned smokers to treatments. Of the 171 smokers taking...
An experiment was designed in order to investigate whether antidepressants can help people quit smoking. The subjects in the experiment were 430 adults over the age of 18 years who were all highly motivated to quit smoking. Half of these subjects were randomly assigned to take 300 mg daily—for 45 weeks—of an antidepressant known as bupropion. The other half were randomly assigned to take a sugar pill daily for 45 weeks. The sugar pill looked like bupropion but did not...
Nicotine patches are often used to help smokers quit. Does adding antidepressants to the nicotine patches help? A randomized double-blind experiment assigned 250 to receive a patch that includes the antidepression drug bupropion and 232 smokers who wanted to stop to receive regular nicotine patches. After a year, 95 in the patch & drug group had abstained from smoking and 49 subjects in the nicotine patch group. p̂patch & drug = ________ p̂patch = ________ Find a 90% confidence interval for...
Dr. Richard Hurt and his colleagues ( Hurt et al., 1994) randomly assigned volunteers wanting to quit smoking to wear either a nicotine patch or a placebo patch to determine whether wearing a nicotine patch improves the chance of quitting. After 8 weeks of use, 46% of those wearing the nicotine patch but only 20% of those wearing the placebo patch had quit smoking. Was this a randomized experiment or an observational study? The difference in the percentage of participants who quit...
In placebo controlled clinical trials for the drug Viagra, 734
subjects received Viagra and 725 subjects received a placebo
(subjects did not know which treatment they received). The table
below summarizes the various side effects reported
PLEASE Endeavor to answer all questions and please make your answes
as visible and coherent. thank you.
Question One
What is the variable in this experiment and Is the variable
qualitative or quantitative?
QUESTIONS TWO
Make a graph of the data and upload it...