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The odds ratio (OR) is probably the most widely used index of effect size in epidemiological studies. The difficulty of interpreting the OR has troubled many clinical researchers and epidemiologists for a long time. We propose a new method for interpreting the size of the OR by relating it to differences in a normal standard deviate. Our calculations indicate that OR = 1.68, 3.47, and 6.71 are equivalent to Cohen's d = 0.2 (small), 0.5 (medium), and 0.8 (large), respectively, when disease rate is 1% in the nonexposed group; Cohen's d 0.8 when OR > 5.
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Henian Chen
Patricia Cohen
Sophie Chen
Communications in Statistics - Simulation and Computation
Columbia University
Stony Brook University
New York State Psychiatric Institute
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Chen et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d77bb4f44a16d01ef31569 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/03610911003650383