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Q: How many sick days does the average person take per year?
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Continue Learning about Statistics

How high does your temperature get if your sick?

If you are feeling sick and dizzy, you will have a temperature of 37 and above.


What is the MAIN cause of employee sick time and lost productivity in the US?

Low back pain


I need a bar graph on which soap is better. Liquid or bar soap?

liquid soap is better because who wants to use someone old nasty bar soap with all of that sick sweat for other people not me


What is the difference between incidence rate ratio and relative risk ratio?

Incidence rate and relative risk are two different measurements used in epidemiology to study illness/disease in specified populations.Incidence rate refers to the number of new cases of a condition in a defined (specified) group or population. It is often expressed as a ratio. For example, if there are 1000 people and 14 of them develop a condition, the incidence rate is 14 per 1000 or 1.4%Relative risk is a measurement that indicates probability of cause. In other words, how likely is it that a place, person or agent is responsible for causing disease/illness.Before you can calculate relative risk, you must first calculate an attack rate on different groups. An attack rate refers to the number of people exposed to an illness compaired to those who actually became sick. To calculate the attack rate, you divide the number of people ill by those who were exposed, and then multiply by 100.To then calculate the relative risk, you divide the attack rate of those sick by the attack rate of those who are not sick.The closer the relative risk is to 1.0, the less likely it is the cause of disease.The higher the relative risk, the more likely it is that it is the cause of disease.


How do you reduce null hypotheses Type 2 errors?

Type II errors are the case of false negatives. In hypothesis testing, we begin with a speculative hypothesis. A type 2 error is created when the test fails to reject the null hypothesis, when the alternative hypothesis is, in reality, true. The null hypothesis can be thought of as the status quo, and the alternative hypothesis is what our experiment is telling us. You can reduce type 2 errors by increasing alpha. However, by increasing alpha, type 1 errors increase, that is to fail to accept the null hypothesis, when the alternative is, in reality, false. Is there any way to reduce both errors? If you increase your sample size (of course with good data), for the same alpha, both will decrease. The understanding of this is very important. It happens with mad cow disease. The tests were very good at identifying that a healthy cow was, in fact,a healthy cow. In thousands of tests, they never had an error. So type 1 errors never occurred, but they had so few cases of sick cows, that it was hard to know if type 2 errors, a cow was sick, but the test showed healthy, ever occurred.

Related questions

How many sick days a average person takes in a year?

Ten


How many sick days the average person takes in a year?

5,4,10,7,8,13,2,6


On average how many sick days a person take a year?

About 406,000 people get sick in a year all around the world.


How many sick days does the average person take in a year family feud?

The average number of sick days a person takes in a year is approximately 4-6 days. This can vary based on factors such as health, job flexibility, and workplace culture.


How many sick days can you get in a year?

It varies quite a bit from person to person based on their immune system; however, the average is about 2-3 times per year.


How many sick days do you have in the navy?

You have as many sick days, as you are sick. Of course, as in all branches of the military, you will have what are called Sick Bay Commandos. There are no sick days unless you are sick. What the military does, is not a game. Sorry, final answer no sick days


What is the average sick leave in the UK?

26 Days.


What is the national average sick days taken in Australia?

11


How many sick days does the average teacher use per year?

On average, teachers in the United States use around 5-10 sick days per year. This number can vary depending on factors such as the school district's policies and the individual teacher's health.


What is the national average of sick days taken per year by full time employees?

For US workers they are allotted on average 8-10 sick days but take only 4.9 days / year according to research by PwC.


How many sick days does a chef get?

11 days


What does the average person do 5 times a year?

mini sick