simpsons_paradox_covid | R Documentation |
A dataset on Delta Variant Covid-19 cases in the UK. This dataset gives a great example of Simpson's Paradox. When aggregating results without regard to age group, the death rate for vaccinated individuals is higher – but they have a much higher risk population. Once we look at populations with more comparable risks (breakout age groups), we see that the vaccinated group tends to be lower risk in each risk-bucketed group and that many of the higher risk patients had gotten vaccinated. The dataset was brought to OpenIntro's attention by Matthew T. Brenneman of Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University. Note: some totals in the original source differ as there were some cases that did not have ages associated with them.
simpsons_paradox_covid
A data frame with 286,166 rows and 3 variables:
Age of the person. Levels: under 50
, 50 +
.
Vaccination status of the person. Note: the vaccinated group includes those who were only partially vaccinated. Levels: vaccinated
, unvaccinated
Did the person die from the Delta variant? Levels: death
and survived
.
Public Health England: Technical briefing 20
library(dplyr) library(scales) # Calculate the mortality rate for all cases by vaccination status simpsons_paradox_covid %>% group_by(vaccine_status, outcome) %>% summarize(count = n()) %>% ungroup() %>% group_by(vaccine_status) %>% mutate(total = sum(count)) %>% filter(outcome == "death") %>% select(c(vaccine_status, count, total)) %>% mutate(mortality_rate = label_percent(accuracy = 0.01)(round(count / total, 4))) %>% select(-c(count, total)) # Calculate mortality rate by age group and vaccination status simpsons_paradox_covid %>% group_by(age_group, vaccine_status, outcome) %>% summarize(count = n()) %>% ungroup() %>% group_by(age_group, vaccine_status) %>% mutate(total = sum(count)) %>% filter(outcome == "death") %>% select(c(age_group, vaccine_status, count, total)) %>% mutate(mortality_rate = label_percent(accuracy = 0.01)(round(count / total, 4))) %>% select(-c(count, total))
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