Hello,
I have a project that I want to create an index for adherence index to antiretroviral therapy (ART).
Adherence questionnaire composed three questions: dose, instruction and schedule.
a. dose is binary answer y/n
b. instruction:
b1. is binary answer y/n
b2. is ordinal answer 1-5
c. schedule is ordinal answer 1-5
Anyone can help is greatly appreciated and thanks in advance.
Regards,
Phan S.
That's not what most programmers would refer to as an index.
Can you explain further what you're referring to as an 'index'? Perhaps posting sample input and expected output may be helpful.
@PhanS wrote:
Hello,
I have a project that I want to create an index for adherence index to antiretroviral therapy (ART).
Adherence questionnaire composed three questions: dose, instruction and schedule.
a. dose is binary answer y/n
b. instruction:
b1. is binary answer y/n
b2. is ordinal answer 1-5
c. schedule is ordinal answer 1-5
Anyone can help is greatly appreciated and thanks in advance.
Regards,
Phan S.
Hello Reeza,
I am sorry - was not feel well.
I attached a file that contains four questions to evaluate 100% adherence to medications.
The index will be used to see if it correlates with:
a) Length of treatment
b) Length of HIV diagnosis
c) CD4 cells counts after 6 months of treatment
d) Viral loads after 6 months of treatment
Thank you.
Phan S.
Hello Reeza,
I attached a file - a researcher used what it called VACS Index to predict HIV mortality.
The VACS Index contains: age, CD4 cells, Viral loads, Hemoglobin, FIB-4 and renal function.
I have no idea how they created. For instance, age. The index were 0 if <50 year; 12 if 50-64 year and 65 if 65+ year.
Thank you.
Phan S.
I forgot the attachment.
You have to be more clear about what you want to do.
SAS Indexes is something completely different from what you want.
Thank your for your input.
I just replied to Reeza.
Phan S.
SAS Innovate 2025 is scheduled for May 6-9 in Orlando, FL. Sign up to be first to learn about the agenda and registration!
ANOVA, or Analysis Of Variance, is used to compare the averages or means of two or more populations to better understand how they differ. Watch this tutorial for more.
Find more tutorials on the SAS Users YouTube channel.