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Patricia Grambsch

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Patricia Louise Meller Grambsch
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of Minnesota
OccupationBiostatistician

Patricia Louise Meller Grambsch is an American biostatistician known for her work on survival models including proportional hazards models. She is an associate professor emerita of biostatistics at the University of Minnesota.[1]

Education and career

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Grambsch completed her Ph.D. in 1980 at the University of Minnesota, with the dissertation Conditional Likelihood Inference supervised by David Hinkley.[2] Before returning to Minnesota as a faculty member, she worked in the survival analysis group at the Mayo Clinic for five years, from 1985 to 1990.[3]

Book

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With Terry M. Therneau, Grambsch is the author of the book Modeling Survival Data: Extending the Cox Model (Statistics for Biology and Health, Springer, 2000).[4]

Recognition

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Grambsch was elected as a Fellow of the American Statistical Association in 1996.[5]

References

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  1. ^ "Patricia Grambsch, PhD, Associate Professor Emerita, Division of Biostatistics", School of Public Health Directory, University of Minnesota, retrieved 2020-06-20
  2. ^ Patricia Grambsch at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
  3. ^ Research departments and divisions: Survival analysis, Mayo Clinic, retrieved 2020-06-20
  4. ^ Reviews of Modeling Survival Data:
  5. ^ ASA Fellows list, retrieved 2020-06-20