In many biomedical studies with recurrent events, some markers can only be measured when events happen. For example, medical cost attributed to hospitalization can only incur when patients are hospitalized. Such marker data are contingent on recurrent events. In this paper, we present a proportional means model for modelling the markers using the observed covariates contingent on the recurrent event. We also model the recurrent event via a marginal rate model. Estimating equations are constructed to derive the point estimators for the parameters in the proposed models. The estimators are shown to be asymptotically normal. Simulation studies are conducted to examine the finite-sample properties of the proposed estimators and the proposed met...
In this article we study a class of semiparametric transformation models with random effects for the...
Many medical studies involve the occurrence of recurrent events,such as times to opportunistic infec...
In this article, we consider the setting where the event of interest can occur repeatedly for the sa...
In many biomedical studies with recurrent events, some markers can only be measured when events happ...
Recurrent events are frequently observed in biomedical studies, and often more than one type of even...
Abstract. Recurrent events are frequently observed in biomedical studies, and often more than one ty...
Recurrent event data are commonly encountered in clinical and epidemiological studies. A major compl...
Recurrent events are frequently encountered in biomedical studies. Evaluating the covariates effects...
In biomedical studies, the event of interest is often recurrent and within-subject events cannot usu...
Recurrent event data are often encountered in biomedical research, for example, recurrent infections...
Recurrent event data arise frequently from medical research. Examples include repeated infections, r...
We propose a semiparametric additive rate model for modelling recurrent events in the presence of a ...
Although recurrent event data analysis is a rapidly evolving area of research, rigorous studies on ...
Many epidemiologic studies involve the occurrence of recurrent events and much attention has been gi...
We propose a broad class of semiparametric transformation models with random effects for the joint a...
In this article we study a class of semiparametric transformation models with random effects for the...
Many medical studies involve the occurrence of recurrent events,such as times to opportunistic infec...
In this article, we consider the setting where the event of interest can occur repeatedly for the sa...
In many biomedical studies with recurrent events, some markers can only be measured when events happ...
Recurrent events are frequently observed in biomedical studies, and often more than one type of even...
Abstract. Recurrent events are frequently observed in biomedical studies, and often more than one ty...
Recurrent event data are commonly encountered in clinical and epidemiological studies. A major compl...
Recurrent events are frequently encountered in biomedical studies. Evaluating the covariates effects...
In biomedical studies, the event of interest is often recurrent and within-subject events cannot usu...
Recurrent event data are often encountered in biomedical research, for example, recurrent infections...
Recurrent event data arise frequently from medical research. Examples include repeated infections, r...
We propose a semiparametric additive rate model for modelling recurrent events in the presence of a ...
Although recurrent event data analysis is a rapidly evolving area of research, rigorous studies on ...
Many epidemiologic studies involve the occurrence of recurrent events and much attention has been gi...
We propose a broad class of semiparametric transformation models with random effects for the joint a...
In this article we study a class of semiparametric transformation models with random effects for the...
Many medical studies involve the occurrence of recurrent events,such as times to opportunistic infec...
In this article, we consider the setting where the event of interest can occur repeatedly for the sa...