What I'm trying to figure out is, how to I determine whether a source I'm looking at is telling the truth? For an example, let's take this page from Metamed: http://www.metamed.com/vital-facts-and-statistics
At first glance, I see some obvious things I ought to consider. It often gives numbers for how many die in hospitals/year, but for my purposes I ought to interpret it in light of how many hospitals are in the US, as well as how many patients are in each hospital. I also notice that as they are trying to promote their site, they probably selected the data that would best serve that purpose.
So where do I go from here? Evaluating each source they reference seems like a waste of time. I do not think it would be wrong to trust that they are not actively lying to me. But how do I move from here to an accurate picture of general doctor competence?
What I mean by "coincidence" is "the 1979 data was obtained by picking at random from the same kind of population as the 1995 data, and the close fit of numbers results from nothing more sinister than a honest sampling procedure".
You still haven't answered a direct question I've asked three times - I wish you would shit or get off the pot.
(ETA: the 1979 document actually says that the selection wasn't random: "We identified and analyzed nine cases where software development was contracted for with Federal funds. Some were brought to our attention because they were problem cases." - so that sample would have been biased toward projects turned "bad". But this is one of the complications I'm choosing to ignore, because it weighs on the side where my priors already lie - that the 1995 frequencies can't possibly match the 1979 that closely without the latter being a textual copy of the earlier. I'm trying to be careful that all the assumptions I make, when I find I have to make them, work against the conclusion I suspect is true.)
What population is that?
You are not asking meaningful questions, you are not setting up your assumptions clearly. You are asking me, directly, "Is bleen more furfle than blaz, if we assume that quux>baz with a standard deviation of approximately quark and also I haven't mentioned other ass... (read more)