Statistical modeling is a fundamental tool in epidemiology that allows us to:
This lecture introduces key concepts in regression modeling using real-world data from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) 2023.
# Load required packages
library(tidyverse)
library(haven)
library(knitr)
library(kableExtra)
library(plotly)
library(broom)
library(car)
library(ggeffects)
library(gtsummary)
library(ggstats)
The BRFSS is a large-scale telephone survey that collects data on health-related risk behaviors, chronic health conditions, and use of preventive services from U.S. residents.
brfss_clean <- readRDS("/Users/jingjunyang/Desktop/EPI553 Project/brfss_subset_2023.rds") %>%
janitor::clean_names()# Summary table by diabetes status
desc_table <- brfss_clean %>%
group_by(diabetes) %>%
summarise(
N = n(),
`Mean Age` = round(mean(age_cont), 1),
`% Male` = round(100 * mean(sex == "Male"), 1),
`% Obese` = round(100 * mean(bmi_cat == "Obese", na.rm = TRUE), 1),
`% Physically Active` = round(100 * mean(phys_active), 1),
`% Current Smoker` = round(100 * mean(current_smoker), 1),
`% Hypertension` = round(100 * mean(hypertension), 1),
`% High Cholesterol` = round(100 * mean(high_chol), 1)
) %>%
mutate(diabetes = ifelse(diabetes == 1, "Diabetes", "No Diabetes"))
desc_table %>%
kable(caption = "Descriptive Statistics by Diabetes Status",
align = "lrrrrrrrr") %>%
kable_styling(bootstrap_options = c("striped", "hover", "condensed"),
full_width = FALSE)| diabetes | N | Mean Age | % Male | % Obese | % Physically Active | % Current Smoker | % Hypertension | % High Cholesterol |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No Diabetes | 1053 | 58.2 | 49.0 | 34.8 | 69.4 | 29.3 | 47.5 | 42.5 |
| Diabetes | 228 | 63.1 | 53.9 | 56.1 | 53.5 | 27.6 | 76.8 | 67.1 |
A statistical model is a mathematical representation of the relationship between:
\[f(Y) = \beta_0 + \beta_1 X_1 + \beta_2 X_2 + \cdots + \beta_p X_p + \epsilon\]
Where:
The choice of regression model depends on the type of outcome variable:
| Outcome Type | Regression Type | Link Function | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Continuous | Linear | Identity: Y | Blood pressure, BMI |
| Binary | Logistic | Logit: log(p/(1-p)) | Disease status, mortality |
| Count | Poisson/Negative Binomial | Log: log(Y) | Number of infections |
| Time-to-event | Cox Proportional Hazards | Log: log(h(t)) | Survival time |
Let’s model the relationship between age and diabetes prevalence.
# Simple linear regression: diabetes ~ age
model_linear_simple <- lm(diabetes ~ age_cont, data = brfss_clean)
# Display results
tidy(model_linear_simple, conf.int = TRUE) %>%
kable(caption = "Simple Linear Regression: Diabetes ~ Age",
digits = 4,
col.names = c("Term", "Estimate", "Std. Error", "t-statistic", "p-value", "95% CI Lower", "95% CI Upper")) %>%
kable_styling(bootstrap_options = c("striped", "hover"),
full_width = FALSE)| Term | Estimate | Std. Error | t-statistic | p-value | 95% CI Lower | 95% CI Upper |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Intercept) | -0.0632 | 0.0481 | -1.3125 | 0.1896 | -0.1576 | 0.0312 |
| age_cont | 0.0041 | 0.0008 | 5.1368 | 0.0000 | 0.0025 | 0.0056 |
Interpretation:
# Create scatter plot with regression line
p1 <- ggplot(brfss_clean, aes(x = age_cont, y = diabetes)) +
geom_jitter(alpha = 0.2, width = 0.5, height = 0.02, color = "steelblue") +
geom_smooth(method = "lm", se = TRUE, color = "red", linewidth = 1.2) +
labs(
title = "Relationship Between Age and Diabetes",
subtitle = "Simple Linear Regression",
x = "Age (years)",
y = "Probability of Diabetes"
) +
theme_minimal(base_size = 12)
ggplotly(p1) %>%
layout(hovermode = "closest")Diabetes Prevalence by Age
Problem with linear regression for binary outcomes:
Solution: Logistic Regression
Uses the logit link function to ensure predicted probabilities stay between 0 and 1:
\[\text{logit}(p) = \log\left(\frac{p}{1-p}\right) = \beta_0 + \beta_1 X_1 + \cdots + \beta_p X_p\]
# Simple logistic regression: diabetes ~ age
model_logistic_simple <- glm(diabetes ~ age_cont,
data = brfss_clean,
family = binomial(link = "logit"))
# Display results with odds ratios
tidy(model_logistic_simple, exponentiate = TRUE, conf.int = TRUE) %>%
kable(caption = "Simple Logistic Regression: Diabetes ~ Age (Odds Ratios)",
digits = 3,
col.names = c("Term", "Odds Ratio", "Std. Error", "z-statistic", "p-value", "95% CI Lower", "95% CI Upper")) %>%
kable_styling(bootstrap_options = c("striped", "hover"),
full_width = FALSE)| Term | Odds Ratio | Std. Error | z-statistic | p-value | 95% CI Lower | 95% CI Upper |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Intercept) | 0.029 | 0.423 | -8.390 | 0 | 0.012 | 0.064 |
| age_cont | 1.034 | 0.007 | 4.978 | 0 | 1.021 | 1.048 |
Interpretation:
Predicted Diabetes Probability by Age
# Generate predicted probabilities
pred_data <- data.frame(age_cont = seq(18, 80, by = 1))
pred_data$predicted_prob <- predict(model_logistic_simple,
newdata = pred_data,
type = "response")
# Plot
p2 <- ggplot(pred_data, aes(x = age_cont, y = predicted_prob)) +
geom_line(color = "darkred", linewidth = 1.5) +
geom_ribbon(aes(ymin = predicted_prob - 0.02,
ymax = predicted_prob + 0.02),
alpha = 0.2, fill = "darkred") +
labs(
title = "Predicted Probability of Diabetes by Age",
subtitle = "Simple Logistic Regression",
x = "Age (years)",
y = "Predicted Probability of Diabetes"
) +
scale_y_continuous(labels = scales::percent_format(), limits = c(0, 0.6)) +
theme_minimal(base_size = 12)
ggplotly(p2)Predicted Diabetes Probability by Age
A confounder is a variable that:
Example: The relationship between age and diabetes may be confounded by BMI, physical activity, and other factors.
# Multiple logistic regression with potential confounders
model_logistic_multiple <- glm(diabetes ~ age_cont + sex + bmi_cat +
phys_active + current_smoker + education,
data = brfss_clean,
family = binomial(link = "logit"))
# Display results
tidy(model_logistic_multiple, exponentiate = TRUE, conf.int = TRUE) %>%
kable(caption = "Multiple Logistic Regression: Diabetes ~ Age + Covariates (Odds Ratios)",
digits = 3,
col.names = c("Term", "Odds Ratio", "Std. Error", "z-statistic", "p-value", "95% CI Lower", "95% CI Upper")) %>%
kable_styling(bootstrap_options = c("striped", "hover"),
full_width = FALSE) %>%
scroll_box(height = "400px")| Term | Odds Ratio | Std. Error | z-statistic | p-value | 95% CI Lower | 95% CI Upper |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Intercept) | 0.009 | 1.177 | -4.001 | 0.000 | 0.000 | 0.065 |
| age_cont | 1.041 | 0.007 | 5.515 | 0.000 | 1.027 | 1.057 |
| sexMale | 1.191 | 0.154 | 1.133 | 0.257 | 0.880 | 1.613 |
| bmi_catNormal | 1.971 | 1.052 | 0.645 | 0.519 | 0.378 | 36.309 |
| bmi_catOverweight | 3.155 | 1.044 | 1.101 | 0.271 | 0.621 | 57.679 |
| bmi_catObese | 6.834 | 1.041 | 1.845 | 0.065 | 1.354 | 124.675 |
| phys_active | 0.589 | 0.157 | -3.373 | 0.001 | 0.433 | 0.802 |
| current_smoker | 1.213 | 0.178 | 1.085 | 0.278 | 0.852 | 1.716 |
| educationHigh school graduate | 0.634 | 0.288 | -1.579 | 0.114 | 0.364 | 1.131 |
| educationSome college | 0.542 | 0.294 | -2.081 | 0.037 | 0.307 | 0.977 |
| educationCollege graduate | 0.584 | 0.305 | -1.763 | 0.078 | 0.324 | 1.074 |
Interpretation:
Categorical variables with \(k\) levels are represented using \(k-1\) dummy variables (indicator variables).
Education has 4 levels: 1. < High school (reference category) 2. High school graduate 3. Some college 4. College graduate
R automatically creates 3 dummy variables:
# Extract dummy variable coding
dummy_table <- data.frame(
Education = c("< High school", "High school graduate", "Some college", "College graduate"),
`Dummy 1 (HS grad)` = c(0, 1, 0, 0),
`Dummy 2 (Some college)` = c(0, 0, 1, 0),
`Dummy 3 (College grad)` = c(0, 0, 0, 1),
check.names = FALSE
)
dummy_table %>%
kable(caption = "Dummy Variable Coding for Education",
align = "lccc") %>%
kable_styling(bootstrap_options = c("striped", "hover"),
full_width = FALSE) %>%
row_spec(1, bold = TRUE, background = "#ffe6e6") # Highlight reference category| Education | Dummy 1 (HS grad) | Dummy 2 (Some college) | Dummy 3 (College grad) |
|---|---|---|---|
| < High school | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| High school graduate | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Some college | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| College graduate | 0 | 0 | 1 |
Reference Category: The category with all zeros (< High school) is the reference group. All other categories are compared to this reference.
# Extract education coefficients
educ_coefs <- tidy(model_logistic_multiple, exponentiate = TRUE, conf.int = TRUE) %>%
filter(str_detect(term, "education")) %>%
mutate(
education_level = str_remove(term, "education"),
education_level = factor(education_level,
levels = c("High school graduate",
"Some college",
"College graduate"))
)
# Add reference category
ref_row <- data.frame(
term = "education< High school",
estimate = 1.0,
std.error = 0,
statistic = NA,
p.value = NA,
conf.low = 1.0,
conf.high = 1.0,
education_level = factor("< High school (Ref)",
levels = c("< High school (Ref)",
"High school graduate",
"Some college",
"College graduate"))
)
educ_coefs_full <- bind_rows(ref_row, educ_coefs) %>%
mutate(education_level = factor(education_level,
levels = c("< High school (Ref)",
"High school graduate",
"Some college",
"College graduate")))
# Plot
p3 <- ggplot(educ_coefs_full, aes(x = education_level, y = estimate)) +
geom_hline(yintercept = 1, linetype = "dashed", color = "gray50") +
geom_pointrange(aes(ymin = conf.low, ymax = conf.high),
size = 0.8, color = "darkblue") +
coord_flip() +
labs(
title = "Association Between Education and Diabetes",
subtitle = "Adjusted Odds Ratios (reference: < High school)",
x = "Education Level",
y = "Odds Ratio (95% CI)"
) +
theme_minimal(base_size = 12)
ggplotly(p3)Odds Ratios for Education Levels
# Plot model coefficients with `ggcoef_model()`
ggcoef_model(model_logistic_multiple, exponentiate = TRUE,
include = c("education"),
variable_labels = c(
education = "Education"),
facet_labeller = ggplot2::label_wrap_gen(10)
)An interaction exists when the effect of one variable on the outcome differs across levels of another variable.
Epidemiologic term: Effect modification
Does the effect of age on diabetes differ between males and females?
# Model with interaction term
model_interaction <- glm(diabetes ~ age_cont * sex + bmi_cat + phys_active,
data = brfss_clean,
family = binomial(link = "logit"))
# Display interaction results
tidy(model_interaction, exponentiate = TRUE, conf.int = TRUE) %>%
filter(str_detect(term, "age_cont")) %>%
kable(caption = "Age × Sex Interaction Model (Odds Ratios)",
digits = 3,
col.names = c("Term", "Odds Ratio", "Std. Error", "z-statistic", "p-value", "95% CI Lower", "95% CI Upper")) %>%
kable_styling(bootstrap_options = c("striped", "hover"),
full_width = FALSE)| Term | Odds Ratio | Std. Error | z-statistic | p-value | 95% CI Lower | 95% CI Upper |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| age_cont | 1.031 | 0.009 | 3.178 | 0.001 | 1.012 | 1.051 |
| age_cont:sexMale | 1.015 | 0.014 | 1.084 | 0.278 | 0.988 | 1.044 |
Interpretation:
# Generate predicted probabilities by sex
pred_interact <- ggpredict(model_interaction, terms = c("age_cont [18:80]", "sex"))
# Plot
p4 <- ggplot(pred_interact, aes(x = x, y = predicted, color = group, fill = group)) +
geom_line(linewidth = 1.2) +
geom_ribbon(aes(ymin = conf.low, ymax = conf.high), alpha = 0.2, color = NA) +
labs(
title = "Predicted Probability of Diabetes by Age and Sex",
subtitle = "Testing for Age × Sex Interaction",
x = "Age (years)",
y = "Predicted Probability of Diabetes",
color = "Sex",
fill = "Sex"
) +
scale_y_continuous(labels = scales::percent_format()) +
scale_color_manual(values = c("Female" = "#E64B35", "Male" = "#4DBBD5")) +
scale_fill_manual(values = c("Female" = "#E64B35", "Male" = "#4DBBD5")) +
theme_minimal(base_size = 12) +
theme(legend.position = "bottom")
ggplotly(p4)Age-Diabetes Relationship by Sex
Every regression model makes assumptions about the data. If assumptions are violated, results may be invalid.
Variance Inflation Factor (VIF): Measures how much the variance of a coefficient is inflated due to correlation with other predictors.
# Calculate VIF
vif_values <- vif(model_logistic_multiple)
# Create VIF table
# For models with categorical variables, vif() returns GVIF (Generalized VIF)
if (is.matrix(vif_values)) {
# If matrix (categorical variables present), extract GVIF^(1/(2*Df))
vif_df <- data.frame(
Variable = rownames(vif_values),
VIF = vif_values[, "GVIF^(1/(2*Df))"]
)
} else {
# If vector (only continuous variables)
vif_df <- data.frame(
Variable = names(vif_values),
VIF = as.numeric(vif_values)
)
}
# Add interpretation
vif_df <- vif_df %>%
arrange(desc(VIF)) %>%
mutate(
Interpretation = case_when(
VIF < 5 ~ "Low (No concern)",
VIF >= 5 & VIF < 10 ~ "Moderate (Monitor)",
VIF >= 10 ~ "High (Problem)"
)
)
vif_df %>%
kable(caption = "Variance Inflation Factors (VIF) for Multiple Regression Model",
digits = 2,
align = "lrc") %>%
kable_styling(bootstrap_options = c("striped", "hover"),
full_width = FALSE) %>%
row_spec(which(vif_df$VIF >= 10), bold = TRUE, color = "white", background = "#DC143C") %>%
row_spec(which(vif_df$VIF >= 5 & vif_df$VIF < 10), background = "#FFA500") %>%
row_spec(which(vif_df$VIF < 5), background = "#90EE90")| Variable | VIF | Interpretation | |
|---|---|---|---|
| age_cont | age_cont | 1.05 | Low (No concern) |
| current_smoker | current_smoker | 1.05 | Low (No concern) |
| phys_active | phys_active | 1.02 | Low (No concern) |
| sex | sex | 1.01 | Low (No concern) |
| education | education | 1.01 | Low (No concern) |
| bmi_cat | bmi_cat | 1.01 | Low (No concern) |
Cook’s Distance: Measures how much the model would change if an observation were removed.
# Calculate Cook's distance
cooks_d <- cooks.distance(model_logistic_multiple)
# Create data frame
influence_df <- data.frame(
observation = 1:length(cooks_d),
cooks_d = cooks_d
) %>%
mutate(influential = ifelse(cooks_d > 1, "Yes", "No"))
# Plot
p5 <- ggplot(influence_df, aes(x = observation, y = cooks_d, color = influential)) +
geom_point(alpha = 0.6) +
geom_hline(yintercept = 1, linetype = "dashed", color = "red") +
labs(
title = "Cook's Distance: Identifying Influential Observations",
subtitle = "Values > 1 indicate potentially influential observations",
x = "Observation Number",
y = "Cook's Distance",
color = "Influential?"
) +
scale_color_manual(values = c("No" = "steelblue", "Yes" = "red")) +
theme_minimal(base_size = 12)
ggplotly(p5)Cook’s Distance for Influential Observations
# Count influential observations
n_influential <- sum(influence_df$influential == "Yes")
cat("Number of potentially influential observations:", n_influential, "\n")## Number of potentially influential observations: 0
Use Likelihood Ratio Test to compare nested models:
# Model 1: Age only
model1 <- glm(diabetes ~ age_cont,
data = brfss_clean,
family = binomial)
# Model 2: Age + Sex
model2 <- glm(diabetes ~ age_cont + sex,
data = brfss_clean,
family = binomial)
# Model 3: Full model
model3 <- model_logistic_multiple
# Likelihood ratio test
lrt_1_2 <- anova(model1, model2, test = "LRT")
lrt_2_3 <- anova(model2, model3, test = "LRT")
# Create comparison table
model_comp <- data.frame(
Model = c("Model 1: Age only",
"Model 2: Age + Sex",
"Model 3: Full model"),
AIC = c(AIC(model1), AIC(model2), AIC(model3)),
BIC = c(BIC(model1), BIC(model2), BIC(model3)),
`Deviance` = c(deviance(model1), deviance(model2), deviance(model3)),
check.names = FALSE
)
model_comp %>%
kable(caption = "Model Comparison: AIC, BIC, and Deviance",
digits = 2,
align = "lrrr") %>%
kable_styling(bootstrap_options = c("striped", "hover"),
full_width = FALSE) %>%
row_spec(which.min(model_comp$AIC), bold = TRUE, background = "#d4edda")| Model | AIC | BIC | Deviance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Model 1: Age only | 1175.08 | 1185.39 | 1171.08 |
| Model 2: Age + Sex | 1175.85 | 1191.32 | 1169.85 |
| Model 3: Full model | 1122.65 | 1179.36 | 1100.65 |
Interpretation:
All statistical models include an error term (\(\epsilon\)) to account for:
\[Y = \beta_0 + \beta_1 X_1 + \cdots + \beta_p X_p + \epsilon\]
Key points:
In this lab, you will:
##
## 0 1
## 606 675
# YOUR CODE HERE: Calculate the prevalence of hypertension by age group
brfss_clean %>%
summarise (overall_prevalence = mean(hypertension, na.rm = TRUE))## # A tibble: 1 × 1
## overall_prevalence
## <dbl>
## 1 0.527
brfss_clean %>%
group_by(age_group) %>%
summarise(
prevalence = mean(hypertension, na.rm = TRUE),
N = n()
)## # A tibble: 6 × 3
## age_group prevalence N
## <fct> <dbl> <int>
## 1 18-24 0.0833 12
## 2 25-34 0.195 77
## 3 35-44 0.304 138
## 4 45-54 0.379 161
## 5 55-64 0.515 266
## 6 65+ 0.668 627
Questions:
# YOUR CODE HERE: Fit a simple logistic regression model
# Outcome: hypertension
# Predictor: age_cont
model_logistic_simple <- glm(hypertension ~ age_cont,
data= brfss_clean,
family = binomial (link = 'logit'))
# YOUR CODE HERE: Display the results with odds ratios
tidy(model_logistic_simple, exponentiate = TRUE, conf.int = TRUE) %>%
kable(caption = "Simple Logistic Regression: Hypertension ~ Age (Odds Ratios)",
digits = 3,
col.names = c("Term","Odds Ratio", "Std.Error", "z-statistic", "p-value", "95% CI Lower", "95% CI Upper")) %>%
kable_styling(bootstrap_options = c("striped", "hover"),
full_width = FALSE)| Term | Odds Ratio | Std.Error | z-statistic | p-value | 95% CI Lower | 95% CI Upper |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Intercept) | 0.048 | 0.296 | -10.293 | 0 | 0.026 | 0.084 |
| age_cont | 1.055 | 0.005 | 10.996 | 0 | 1.045 | 1.065 |
Questions:
# YOUR CODE HERE: Fit a multiple logistic regression model
# Outcome: hypertension
# Predictors: age_cont, sex, bmi_cat, phys_active, current_smoker
model_logistic_multiple <- glm(hypertension ~ age_cont + sex + bmi_cat +
phys_active + current_smoker,
data= brfss_clean,
family = binomial (link = "logit"))
# YOUR CODE HERE: Display the results
tidy(model_logistic_multiple, exponentiate = TRUE, conf.int = TRUE) %>%
kable(caption = "Multiple Logistic Regression: Hypertension ~ Age + Covariates (Odds Ratios)",
digits = 3,
colnames= c("Terms", "Odds Ratio", "Std.Erro", "z-statistic", "95% CI lower", "95% CI Upper")) %>%
kable_styling(bootstrap_options = c("Striped", "hover"),
full_width = FALSE) %>%
scroll_box(height = "400px")| term | estimate | std.error | statistic | p.value | conf.low | conf.high |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Intercept) | 0.008 | 0.653 | -7.355 | 0.000 | 0.002 | 0.028 |
| age_cont | 1.061 | 0.005 | 11.234 | 0.000 | 1.050 | 1.073 |
| sexMale | 1.270 | 0.123 | 1.950 | 0.051 | 0.999 | 1.616 |
| bmi_catNormal | 2.097 | 0.546 | 1.356 | 0.175 | 0.759 | 6.756 |
| bmi_catOverweight | 3.241 | 0.543 | 2.166 | 0.030 | 1.183 | 10.385 |
| bmi_catObese | 6.585 | 0.545 | 3.459 | 0.001 | 2.394 | 21.176 |
| phys_active | 0.900 | 0.130 | -0.808 | 0.419 | 0.697 | 1.162 |
| current_smoker | 1.071 | 0.139 | 0.495 | 0.621 | 0.817 | 1.407 |
Questions:
How did the odds ratio for age change after adjusting for other variables? The odds ratio increased from 5.5% to 6.1% in the odds of having hypertension, slightly higher than the 5.5% estimated before adjustment.
What does this suggest about confounding? The change in odds ratio indicates that there was confounding present.Adjusting for other variables such as BMI, physical activity, sex ..etc.. were masked part of the true effect of age in the unadjusted model.
Which variables are the strongest predictors of hypertension? The strongest predictors of hypertension are obese BMI and Age as they also had a p-value < 0.05 compared to other confounding factors. —
# YOUR CODE HERE: Create a table showing the dummy variable coding for bmi_cat
dummy_table <- data.frame(
bmi_cat = c("underweight", "normal weight", "overweight", "obese"),
`Dummy 1 (normal weight)` = c(0, 1, 0, 0),
`Dummy 2 (overweight)` = c(0, 0, 1, 0),
`Dummy 3 (obese)` = c(0, 0, 0, 1),
check.names = FALSE
)
dummy_table %>%
kable(caption = "Dummy Variable Coding for BMI",
align= "lccc") %>%
kable_styling(bootstrap_options = c("striped", "hover"),
full_width = FALSE) %>%
row_spec(1, bold = TRUE, background = "#ffe6e6")| bmi_cat | Dummy 1 (normal weight) | Dummy 2 (overweight) | Dummy 3 (obese) |
|---|---|---|---|
| underweight | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| normal weight | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| overweight | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| obese | 0 | 0 | 1 |
# YOUR CODE HERE: Extract and display the odds ratios for BMI categories
bmi_coefs <- tidy(model_logistic_multiple, exponentiate = TRUE, conf.int = TRUE) %>%
filter(str_detect(term, "bmi_cat")) %>%
mutate(
bmi_level = str_remove(term, "bmi_cat"),
bmi_level = factor(bmi_level,
levels = c("Underweight (Ref)",
"normal weight",
"overweight",
"obese"))
)
# Add reference category
ref_row <- data.frame(
term = "bmi_catUnderweight",
estimate = 1.0,
std.error = 0,
statistic = NA,
p.value = NA,
conf.low = 1.0,
conf.high = 1.0,
education_level = factor("< Underweight (Ref)",
levels = c("< Underweight (Ref)",
"Normal",
"Overweight",
"Obese"))
)
bmi_coefs_full <- bind_rows(ref_row, bmi_coefs) %>%
mutate(bmi_level = factor(bmi_level,
levels = c("Underweight (Ref)",
"Normal",
"Overweight",
"Obese")))
# Plot
p3 <- ggplot(bmi_coefs_full, aes(x = bmi_level, y = estimate)) +
geom_hline(yintercept = 1, linetype = "dashed", color = "gray50") +
geom_pointrange(aes(ymin = conf.low, ymax = conf.high),
size = 0.8, color = "darkblue") +
coord_flip() +
labs(
title = "Association Between BMI and Hypertension",
subtitle = "Adjusted Odds Ratios (reference: Underweight)",
x = "BMI Level",
y = "Odds Ratio (95% CI)"
) +
theme_minimal(base_size = 12)
ggplotly(p3)# Plot model coefficients with `ggcoef_model()`
ggcoef_model(model_logistic_multiple, exponentiate = TRUE,
include = c("bmi_cat"),
variable_labels = c(
bmi_cat = "bmi_cat"),
facet_labeller = ggplot2::label_wrap_gen(10)
)Questions:
# YOUR CODE HERE: Fit a model with Age × BMI interaction
# Test if the effect of age on hypertension differs by BMI category
model_interaction <- glm(hypertension ~ age_cont * bmi_cat,
data = brfss_clean,
family = binomial(link = "logit"))
# Display interaction results
tidy(model_interaction, exponentiate = TRUE, conf.int = TRUE) %>%
filter(str_detect(term, "age_cont")) %>%
kable(caption = "Age × BMI Interaction Model (Odds Ratios)",
digits = 3,
col.names = c("Term", "Odds Ratio", "Std. Error", "z-statistic", "p-value", "95% CI Lower", "95% CI Upper")) %>%
kable_styling(bootstrap_options = c("striped", "hover"),
full_width = FALSE)| Term | Odds Ratio | Std. Error | z-statistic | p-value | 95% CI Lower | 95% CI Upper |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| age_cont | 1.004 | 0.042 | 0.102 | 0.918 | 0.929 | 1.108 |
| age_cont:bmi_catNormal | 1.058 | 0.043 | 1.306 | 0.192 | 0.957 | 1.147 |
| age_cont:bmi_catOverweight | 1.063 | 0.043 | 1.423 | 0.155 | 0.962 | 1.151 |
| age_cont:bmi_catObese | 1.054 | 0.042 | 1.232 | 0.218 | 0.954 | 1.140 |
# YOUR CODE HERE: Perform a likelihood ratio test comparing models with and without interaction
# Model without interaction
model_no_interaction <- glm(hypertension ~ age_cont + bmi_cat,
data = brfss_clean,
family = binomial(link = "logit"))
# Model with interaction
model_interaction <- glm(hypertension ~ age_cont * bmi_cat,
data = brfss_clean,
family = binomial(link = "logit"))
# Likelihood ratio test
anova(model_no_interaction, model_interaction, test = "Chisq")Analysis of Deviance Table
Model 1: hypertension ~ age_cont + bmi_cat Model 2: hypertension ~
age_cont * bmi_cat Resid. Df Resid. Dev Df Deviance Pr(>Chi) 1 1276
1568.1
2 1273 1566.1 3 1.9645 0.5798
Questions:
Is the interaction term statistically significant? No, the interaction between age and BMI is not statistically significant. P-value >0.05: not statistically significant.
What does this mean in epidemiologic terms (effect modification)? BMI does not change the relationship between age and hypertension.
Create a visualization showing predicted probabilities by age and BMI category
# YOUR CODE HERE: Calculate VIF for your multiple regression model
# YOUR CODE HERE: Create a Cook's distance plot to identify influential observationsQuestions:
# YOUR CODE HERE: Compare three models using AIC and BIC
# Model A: Age only
# Model B: Age + sex + bmi_cat
# Model C: Age + sex + bmi_cat + phys_active + current_smoker
# YOUR CODE HERE: Create a comparison tableQuestions:
Write a brief report (1-2 pages) summarizing your findings:
Submission: Submit your completed R Markdown file and knitted HTML report.
Logistic Regression:
\[\text{logit}(p) = \log\left(\frac{p}{1-p}\right) = \beta_0 + \beta_1 X_1 + \cdots + \beta_p X_p\]
Odds Ratio:
\[\text{OR} = e^{\beta_i}\]
Predicted Probability:
\[p = \frac{e^{\beta_0 + \beta_1 X_1 + \cdots + \beta_p X_p}}{1 + e^{\beta_0 + \beta_1 X_1 + \cdots + \beta_p X_p}}\]
Session Info
## R version 4.5.1 (2025-06-13)
## Platform: aarch64-apple-darwin20
## Running under: macOS Ventura 13.5
##
## Matrix products: default
## BLAS: /Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Versions/4.5-arm64/Resources/lib/libRblas.0.dylib
## LAPACK: /Library/Frameworks/R.framework/Versions/4.5-arm64/Resources/lib/libRlapack.dylib; LAPACK version 3.12.1
##
## locale:
## [1] en_US.UTF-8/en_US.UTF-8/en_US.UTF-8/C/en_US.UTF-8/en_US.UTF-8
##
## time zone: America/New_York
## tzcode source: internal
##
## attached base packages:
## [1] stats graphics grDevices utils datasets methods base
##
## other attached packages:
## [1] ggstats_0.12.0 gtsummary_2.5.0 ggeffects_2.3.2 car_3.1-3
## [5] carData_3.0-5 broom_1.0.11 plotly_4.12.0 kableExtra_1.4.0
## [9] knitr_1.51 haven_2.5.5 lubridate_1.9.4 forcats_1.0.1
## [13] stringr_1.6.0 dplyr_1.2.0 purrr_1.2.1 readr_2.1.6
## [17] tidyr_1.3.2 tibble_3.3.1 ggplot2_4.0.1 tidyverse_2.0.0
##
## loaded via a namespace (and not attached):
## [1] gtable_0.3.6 xfun_0.56 bslib_0.10.0
## [4] htmlwidgets_1.6.4 insight_1.4.5 lattice_0.22-7
## [7] tzdb_0.5.0 crosstalk_1.2.2 vctrs_0.7.1
## [10] tools_4.5.1 generics_0.1.4 datawizard_1.3.0
## [13] pkgconfig_2.0.3 Matrix_1.7-3 data.table_1.18.0
## [16] RColorBrewer_1.1-3 S7_0.2.1 lifecycle_1.0.5
## [19] compiler_4.5.1 farver_2.1.2 textshaping_1.0.4
## [22] janitor_2.2.1 codetools_0.2-20 snakecase_0.11.1
## [25] htmltools_0.5.9 sass_0.4.10 yaml_2.3.12
## [28] lazyeval_0.2.2 Formula_1.2-5 pillar_1.11.1
## [31] jquerylib_0.1.4 broom.helpers_1.22.0 cachem_1.1.0
## [34] abind_1.4-8 nlme_3.1-168 tidyselect_1.2.1
## [37] digest_0.6.39 stringi_1.8.7 labeling_0.4.3
## [40] splines_4.5.1 labelled_2.16.0 fastmap_1.2.0
## [43] grid_4.5.1 cli_3.6.5 magrittr_2.0.4
## [46] cards_0.7.1 utf8_1.2.6 withr_3.0.2
## [49] scales_1.4.0 backports_1.5.0 timechange_0.3.0
## [52] rmarkdown_2.30 httr_1.4.7 otel_0.2.0
## [55] hms_1.1.4 evaluate_1.0.5 viridisLite_0.4.2
## [58] mgcv_1.9-3 rlang_1.1.7 glue_1.8.0
## [61] xml2_1.5.2 svglite_2.2.2 rstudioapi_0.18.0
## [64] jsonlite_2.0.0 R6_2.6.1 systemfonts_1.3.1