Background: Injuries are often recurrent, with subsequent injuries influenced by previous occurrences and hence correlation between events needs to be taken into account when analysing such data. Objective: This paper compares five different survival models (Cox proportional hazards (CoxPH) model and the following generalisations to recurrent event data: Andersen-Gill (A-G), frailty, Wei-Lin-Weissfeld total time (WLW-TT) marginal, Prentice-Williams-Peterson gap time (PWP-GT) conditional models) for the analysis of recurrent injury data. Methods: Empirical evaluation and comparison of different models were performed using model selection criteria and goodness-of-fit statistics. Simulation studies assessed the size and power of each model fit...
The trend-renewal model for recurrent time-to-event data is seldom used outside of the reliability l...
Musculoskeletal injuries are prevalent in athletics. Over the past several decades there has been in...
BACKGROUND: Injury surveillance in professional sport categorises injuries as either "new" or "recur...
BACKGROUND: Injuries are often recurrent, with subsequent injuries influenced by previous occurrence...
BACKGROUND: Injuries are often recurrent, with subsequent injuries influenced by previous occurrence...
Background Injuries are often recurrent, with subsequent injuries influenced by previous occurrences...
Data-based methods and statistical models are given special attention to the study of sports injurie...
Sports injuries stand as undesirable side effects of athletic participation, carrying serious conseq...
Episodic or recurrent events are a class of data that is frequently reported in health sciences rese...
Objective: Sports injuries are often recurrent and there is wide recognition that a subsequent injur...
OBJECTIVE: Sports injuries are often recurrent and there is wide recognition that a subsequent injur...
Objectives: Well-developed physical qualities may protect against contact injuries. However, the pot...
Objectives: Well-developed physical qualities may protect against contact injuries. However, the pot...
Objectives: Well-developed physical qualities may protect against contact injuries. However, the pot...
Objectives: Well-developed physical qualities may protect against contact injuries. However, the pot...
The trend-renewal model for recurrent time-to-event data is seldom used outside of the reliability l...
Musculoskeletal injuries are prevalent in athletics. Over the past several decades there has been in...
BACKGROUND: Injury surveillance in professional sport categorises injuries as either "new" or "recur...
BACKGROUND: Injuries are often recurrent, with subsequent injuries influenced by previous occurrence...
BACKGROUND: Injuries are often recurrent, with subsequent injuries influenced by previous occurrence...
Background Injuries are often recurrent, with subsequent injuries influenced by previous occurrences...
Data-based methods and statistical models are given special attention to the study of sports injurie...
Sports injuries stand as undesirable side effects of athletic participation, carrying serious conseq...
Episodic or recurrent events are a class of data that is frequently reported in health sciences rese...
Objective: Sports injuries are often recurrent and there is wide recognition that a subsequent injur...
OBJECTIVE: Sports injuries are often recurrent and there is wide recognition that a subsequent injur...
Objectives: Well-developed physical qualities may protect against contact injuries. However, the pot...
Objectives: Well-developed physical qualities may protect against contact injuries. However, the pot...
Objectives: Well-developed physical qualities may protect against contact injuries. However, the pot...
Objectives: Well-developed physical qualities may protect against contact injuries. However, the pot...
The trend-renewal model for recurrent time-to-event data is seldom used outside of the reliability l...
Musculoskeletal injuries are prevalent in athletics. Over the past several decades there has been in...
BACKGROUND: Injury surveillance in professional sport categorises injuries as either "new" or "recur...