How do you interpret a hazard ratio in a medical paper?
Short answer
A hazard ratio compares the rate at which an event happens in one group versus another over time. Values below 1 suggest a lower event rate in the treatment or exposed group, values above 1 suggest a higher event rate, and the confidence interval shows how precise the estimate is. Interpretation depends on the endpoint, follow-up, and study design.
Execution Steps
- 1Identify the event being measured and which groups are being compared.
- 2Read the hazard ratio together with its confidence interval, not in isolation.
- 3Check whether the interval crosses 1 and what that implies for certainty.
- 4Look at follow-up, censoring, and whether the endpoint is clinically meaningful.
- 5Use LancetClaw if you want the result paragraph and figure interpreted together.
Prompt Template
Explain this hazard ratio in context. Tell me what it means, how confident I should be, and what I should not overclaim from it.
Common Failure Points
- Treating a hazard ratio like a simple risk ratio
- Ignoring the confidence interval
- Overclaiming a result without understanding the underlying endpoint
FAQ
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