This Is Why with Dr. Busti

Effect Size (Relative Risk (RR), Odds Ratio (OR), NNT/NNH) Made Simple

39 min · 4 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Effect Size (Relative Risk (RR), Odds Ratio (OR), NNT/NNH) Made Simple

Descripción

Effect size (Relative risk vs odds ratio vs hazard ratio & NNT and NNH explained — This Is Why understanding these concepts is essential for interpreting clinical trials with Dr. Busti. In this episode of This Is Why, Dr. Busti breaks down relative risk (RR), odds ratios (OR), absolute risk reduction (ARR), absolute risk increase (ARI), number needed to treat (NNT), and number needed to harm (MMH) in a way that connects directly to real clinical decision-making. This Is Why learning the “why” behind these calculations helps you move beyond memorization and actually apply evidence to patient care. You’ll learn how to interpret whether a treatment increases or decreases risk, how to calculate and understand number needed to treat (NNT), and how to avoid common mistakes—like misinterpreting percentages or confusing statistical vs clinical meaning. Dr. Busti also walks through practical examples, including antihypertensive side effects, aspirin for MI prevention, and statin therapy, to show how these metrics influence real-world decisions. Topics Covered: - Definition of relative risk (risk ratio) - When to use relative risk (RR) vs odds ratio (OR) vs hazards ratio (HR) - Prospective vs retrospective study design - Interpreting RR - Confidence intervals and statistical significance - Relative risk increase vs reduction - Absolute risk reduction (ARR) explained - Number needed to treat (NNT) & Number needed to harm (NNH) calculations - Clinical vs statistical interpretation of risk - Applying evidence to cost and patient outcomes The goal = make medical education easy and clinically relevant. 👉 Get more with a free membership at https://www.thisiswhy.health/ - Access free downloads from our videos  - Access deep dive content from Dr. Busti - Organize content via playlists & collections - Join live Q&A - Receive member newsletters - Coupons & discounts for exam prep resources Chapter Table of Contents 00:00 - Introduction 02:52 - Effect Size Fundamentals 06:26 - Risk vs Odds Calculations 09:54 - Relative Risk (RR) & Relative Risk Increase 15:34 - Relative Risk Reduction (RRR) 19:04 - Absolute Risk Reduction (ARR) & Number Needed to Treat (NNT) 22:13 - Absolute Risk Increase (ARI) & Number Needed to Harm (NNH) 25:51 - Odds Ratio (OR): Interpretation & Pitfalls 32:14 - Hazard Ratio (HR) & Kaplan-Meier Concepts 34:45 - Confidence Intervals & Exam Pearls 36:31 - Conclusion 👍 If this helped you, please like, subscribe, and share it with a classmate or colleague. That will help this new channel continue producing free, high-yield medical education content. 🔔 Don’t forget to turn on notifications so you don’t miss upcoming lectures in pharmacology, medical rounds, and more! #relativerisk #oddsratio #nnt #ebm #Dr Busti  Speaker: Anthony Busti, MD, PharmD, MSc, FAHA, FNLA, is a licensed healthcare professional and medical educator with over 30 years of experience in clinical practice and academic teaching. He has trained and practiced as a nurse, pharmacist, and physician, bringing a uniquely comprehensive perspective to patient care and medical education. Dr. Busti is dedicated to advancing evidence-based medicine and helping clinicians understand the underlying “why” behind clinical decisions to improve patient outcomes. About This Channel: This content is created by Anthony Busti, MD, PharmD, MSc, FAHA, FNLA, a board-certified physician with training at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and University of Oxford and a medical educator for healthcare professionals and students. All material is based on current medical literature and evidence-based guidelines that align with principles of evidence-based medicine (EBM) and Evidence-Based Healthcare (EBHC). Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. It does not replace individualized evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified health provider with questions about a medical condition and never delay care because of educational content.

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103 episodios

episode Effect Size (Relative Risk (RR), Odds Ratio (OR), NNT/NNH) Made Simple artwork

Effect Size (Relative Risk (RR), Odds Ratio (OR), NNT/NNH) Made Simple

Effect size (Relative risk vs odds ratio vs hazard ratio & NNT and NNH explained — This Is Why understanding these concepts is essential for interpreting clinical trials with Dr. Busti. In this episode of This Is Why, Dr. Busti breaks down relative risk (RR), odds ratios (OR), absolute risk reduction (ARR), absolute risk increase (ARI), number needed to treat (NNT), and number needed to harm (MMH) in a way that connects directly to real clinical decision-making. This Is Why learning the “why” behind these calculations helps you move beyond memorization and actually apply evidence to patient care. You’ll learn how to interpret whether a treatment increases or decreases risk, how to calculate and understand number needed to treat (NNT), and how to avoid common mistakes—like misinterpreting percentages or confusing statistical vs clinical meaning. Dr. Busti also walks through practical examples, including antihypertensive side effects, aspirin for MI prevention, and statin therapy, to show how these metrics influence real-world decisions. Topics Covered: - Definition of relative risk (risk ratio) - When to use relative risk (RR) vs odds ratio (OR) vs hazards ratio (HR) - Prospective vs retrospective study design - Interpreting RR - Confidence intervals and statistical significance - Relative risk increase vs reduction - Absolute risk reduction (ARR) explained - Number needed to treat (NNT) & Number needed to harm (NNH) calculations - Clinical vs statistical interpretation of risk - Applying evidence to cost and patient outcomes The goal = make medical education easy and clinically relevant. 👉 Get more with a free membership at https://www.thisiswhy.health/ - Access free downloads from our videos  - Access deep dive content from Dr. Busti - Organize content via playlists & collections - Join live Q&A - Receive member newsletters - Coupons & discounts for exam prep resources Chapter Table of Contents 00:00 - Introduction 02:52 - Effect Size Fundamentals 06:26 - Risk vs Odds Calculations 09:54 - Relative Risk (RR) & Relative Risk Increase 15:34 - Relative Risk Reduction (RRR) 19:04 - Absolute Risk Reduction (ARR) & Number Needed to Treat (NNT) 22:13 - Absolute Risk Increase (ARI) & Number Needed to Harm (NNH) 25:51 - Odds Ratio (OR): Interpretation & Pitfalls 32:14 - Hazard Ratio (HR) & Kaplan-Meier Concepts 34:45 - Confidence Intervals & Exam Pearls 36:31 - Conclusion 👍 If this helped you, please like, subscribe, and share it with a classmate or colleague. That will help this new channel continue producing free, high-yield medical education content. 🔔 Don’t forget to turn on notifications so you don’t miss upcoming lectures in pharmacology, medical rounds, and more! #relativerisk #oddsratio #nnt #ebm #Dr Busti  Speaker: Anthony Busti, MD, PharmD, MSc, FAHA, FNLA, is a licensed healthcare professional and medical educator with over 30 years of experience in clinical practice and academic teaching. He has trained and practiced as a nurse, pharmacist, and physician, bringing a uniquely comprehensive perspective to patient care and medical education. Dr. Busti is dedicated to advancing evidence-based medicine and helping clinicians understand the underlying “why” behind clinical decisions to improve patient outcomes. About This Channel: This content is created by Anthony Busti, MD, PharmD, MSc, FAHA, FNLA, a board-certified physician with training at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and University of Oxford and a medical educator for healthcare professionals and students. All material is based on current medical literature and evidence-based guidelines that align with principles of evidence-based medicine (EBM) and Evidence-Based Healthcare (EBHC). Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. It does not replace individualized evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified health provider with questions about a medical condition and never delay care because of educational content.

4 de jun de 202639 min
episode D-Dimer Explained: When Suspected DVT Needs Ultrasound artwork

D-Dimer Explained: When Suspected DVT Needs Ultrasound

D-dimer explained for DVT evaluation. This Is Why healthcare professionals must understand what an elevated D-dimer actually means before jumping to conclusions. Dr. Busti walks through a common deep vein thrombosis scenario and explains why compression ultrasonography—not automatic anticoagulation—is the correct next step when DVT is suspected. Many learners incorrectly assume that an elevated D-dimer confirms a clot. Others memorize algorithms without understanding the clinical reasoning behind them. In this episode, Dr. Busti breaks down Wells score interpretation, pretest probability, D-dimer limitations, and how clinicians should approach suspected DVT in real-world practice. Whether you're preparing for boards, rotations, residency, or clinical practice, this episode focuses on understanding the "why" behind thrombosis evaluation so you can confidently apply the "how." Topics Covered: - Understanding DVT pretest probability - Interpreting the Wells-DVT score - What D-dimer actually measures - Why elevated D-dimer does not confirm DVT - Negative predictive value and rule-out testing - Age-adjusted versus conventional D-dimer thresholds - When compression ultrasonography is indicated - Why anticoagulation is not always the next step - Common board exam traps in DVT evaluation - Clinical reasoning for suspected venous thromboembolism The goal = make medical education easy and clinically relevant. 👉 Access bonus materials and downloads from this episode at: https://www.thisiswhy.health/topics/d-dimer-explained-suspected-dvt-ultrasound-exam-question 👉 Get more with a free membership at https://www.thisiswhy.health/ - Access free downloads from our videos  - Access deep dive content from Dr. Busti - Organize content via playlists & collections - Join live Q&A - Receive member newsletters - Coupons & discounts for exam prep resources Chapter Table of Contents 00:00 DVT Case: Wells Score 2 and D-Dimer 600 02:40 Why DVT Symptoms Alone Are Not Diagnostic 03:31 Wells Score Explained: What "DVT Likely" Means 04:11 What an Elevated D-Dimer Actually Tells You 04:53 Causes of Elevated D-Dimer Besides DVT 05:29 Why D-Dimer Is Primarily a Rule-Out Test 06:36 When to Use Compression Venous Ultrasound 07:35 When Empiric Anticoagulation May Be Appropriate 08:26 Why CBC Is Not the Next Step 09:02 Why an Elevated D-Dimer Does Not Confirm DVT 09:57 Why Repeating a D-Dimer Is a Mistake 10:32 DVT Workup: Wells Score → D-Dimer → Ultrasound 👍 If this helped you, please like, subscribe, and share it with a classmate or colleague. That will help this new channel continue producing free, high-yield medical education content. 🔔 Don’t forget to turn on notifications so you don’t miss upcoming lectures in pharmacology, medical rounds, and more! #DVT #DDimer #WellsScore #DeepVeinThrombosis #DrBusti Speaker: Anthony Busti, MD, PharmD, MSc, FAHA, FNLA, is a licensed healthcare professional and medical educator with over 30 years of experience in clinical practice and academic teaching. He has trained and practiced as a nurse, pharmacist, and physician, bringing a uniquely comprehensive perspective to patient care and medical education. Dr. Busti is dedicated to advancing evidence-based medicine and helping clinicians understand the underlying “why” behind clinical decisions to improve patient outcomes. About This Channel: This content is created by Anthony Busti, MD, PharmD, MSc, FAHA, FNLA, a board-certified physician with training at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and University of Oxford and a medical educator for healthcare professionals and students. All material is based on current medical literature and evidence-based guidelines that align with principles of evidence-based medicine (EBM) and Evidence-Based Healthcare (EBHC). Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. It does not replace individualized evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified health provider with questions about a medical condition and never delay care because of educational content.

2 de jun de 202613 min
episode NINDS Trial Explained Stroke Thrombolysis Risks and Benefits artwork

NINDS Trial Explained Stroke Thrombolysis Risks and Benefits

Stroke thrombolysis changed emergency neurology forever—but understanding why the NINDS trial mattered is what transforms memorization into clinical decision-making. In this episode of This Is Why with Dr. Busti, we break down the landmark NINDS rt-PA trial that established alteplase as a treatment for acute ischemic stroke and explore the real-world balance between functional recovery and intracerebral hemorrhage risk. Dr. Busti explains how to interpret the trial beyond headlines by walking through the study design, inclusion criteria, outcomes, NNT and NNH calculations, odds ratios, bleeding risk, and the evolution of thrombolytic therapy from alteplase to tenecteplase. This episode also contextualizes modern AHA/ASA recommendations and what clinicians should actually say during bedside risk-benefit discussions with patients and families. This Is Why medical education focuses on understanding the “why” behind clinical decisions so healthcare professionals can apply evidence with confidence and clarity. Topics Covered: - NINDS rt-PA trial explained - Alteplase for acute ischemic stroke - Stroke thrombolysis risks and benefits - Functional recovery vs hemorrhage risk - NNT and NNH interpretation - Odds ratio vs absolute risk - Tenecteplase vs alteplase - Modern stroke thrombolysis guidelines - Shared decision-making in stroke care - Why early reperfusion matters The goal = make medical education easy and clinically relevant. 👉 Access bonus materials and downloads from this episode at: https://www.thisiswhy.health/topics/ninds-trial-stroke-thrombolysis-risks-benefits 🎥 Watch other videos referenced in this episode! P-Value: https://youtu.be/ibl85Flpm94 Alpha Value Explained: https://youtu.be/Fmu4HwaGrtU Power Analysis - Type II Error Risk: https://youtu.be/zn9q9E1IOoc 👉 Get more with a free membership at https://www.thisiswhy.health/ - Access free downloads from our videos  - Access deep dive content from Dr. Busti - Organize content via playlists & collections - Join live Q&A - Receive member newsletters - Coupons & discounts for exam prep resources Chapter Table of Contents 00:00 - Introduction 01:46 - NINDS Trial (1995) 04:40 - Trial Design, Inclusion & Exclusion Criteria 06:38 - Part 1: The Negative 24-Hour Endpoint Explained 11:28 - Part 2: Functional Outcomes That Changed Practice 13:45 - NNT, NNH & Explaining Risk to Patients 19:18 - One-Year Outcomes & Interpreting Odds Ratios Correctly 22:09 - Later Evidence, Meta-Analyses & Expanded Treatment Windows 25:30 - Tenecteplase vs Alteplase & Modern Stroke Practice 28:17 - Conclusion 👍 If this helped you, please like, subscribe, and share it with a classmate or colleague. That will help this new channel continue producing free, high-yield medical education content. 🔔 Don’t forget to turn on notifications so you don’t miss upcoming lectures in pharmacology, medical rounds, and more! #AcuteIschemicStroke #NINDSTrial #StrokeThrombolysis #Alteplase #Tenecteplase #DrBusti Speaker: Anthony Busti, MD, PharmD, MSc, FAHA, FNLA, is a licensed healthcare professional and medical educator with over 30 years of experience in clinical practice and academic teaching. He has trained and practiced as a nurse, pharmacist, and physician, bringing a uniquely comprehensive perspective to patient care and medical education. Dr. Busti is dedicated to advancing evidence-based medicine and helping clinicians understand the underlying “why” behind clinical decisions to improve patient outcomes. About This Channel: This content is created by Anthony Busti, MD, PharmD, MSc, FAHA, FNLA, a board-certified physician with training at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and University of Oxford and a medical educator for healthcare professionals and students. All material is based on current medical literature and evidence-based guidelines that align with principles of evidence-based medicine (EBM) and Evidence-Based Healthcare (EBHC). Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. It does not replace individualized evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified health provider with questions about a medical condition and never delay care because of educational content.

27 de may de 202630 min
episode 95% Confidence Intervals Explained for Medical Literature artwork

95% Confidence Intervals Explained for Medical Literature

Confidence intervals are one of the most misunderstood concepts in evidence-based medicine. In this episode of This Is Why with Dr. Busti, we break down what 95% confidence intervals actually mean, how they relate to p values and effect size, and why they are essential for interpreting clinical research correctly. Dr. Busti walks through practical examples involving odds ratios, hazard ratios, relative risk, forest plots, and statistical significance so healthcare professionals can confidently evaluate published literature and apply evidence appropriately in clinical decision-making. Whether you're preparing for boards, learning research interpretation, or improving your evidence-based medicine skills, this episode helps transform statistical confusion into clinical understanding. Topics Covered: - What a 95% confidence interval actually means - Why confidence intervals matter in inferential statistics - Relationship between confidence intervals and p values - Understanding statistical significance - Why confidence intervals can be wide or narrow - Sample size and precision of results - Interpreting odds ratios and hazard ratios - Why crossing 1.0 matters for ratios - Why crossing 0 matters for means - Forest plot interpretation basics - Clinical relevance versus statistical significance - Confidence intervals in meta-analyses - Understanding random error and confounding - Examples from cardiovascular literature - Evidence-based medicine interpretation strategies This Is Why with Dr. Busti helps healthcare professionals move beyond memorization by understanding the why behind clinical evidence and patient care decisions. 👉 Access bonus materials and downloads from this episode at: https://www.thisiswhy.health/topics/confidence-intervals-explained-medical-statistics 👉 Get more with a free membership at https://www.thisiswhy.health/ - Access free downloads from our videos  - Access deep dive content from Dr. Busti - Organize content via playlists & collections - Join live Q&A - Receive member newsletters - Coupons & discounts for exam prep resources Chapter Table of Contents 00:00 - Introduction 01:52 - Concept Overview 03:29 - What a 95% Confidence Interval Really Means 04:39 - Why Narrow CI Matter 07:10 - Statistical Significance of CI 08:57 - Sample Question 12:01 - Integration & Application 12:56 - PROactive Trial & Aspirin Meta-Analysis 22:07 - Impact of Controlling for Confounders 24:01 - Conclusion 👍 If this helped you, please like, subscribe, and share it with a classmate or colleague. That will help this new channel continue producing free, high-yield medical education content. 🔔 Don’t forget to turn on notifications so you don’t miss upcoming lectures in pharmacology, medical rounds, and more! #evidencebasedmedicine #confidenceinterval #statistics #clinicalresearch #medicaleducation #DrBusti Speaker: Anthony Busti, MD, PharmD, MSc, FAHA, FNLA, is a licensed healthcare professional and medical educator with over 30 years of experience in clinical practice and academic teaching. He has trained and practiced as a nurse, pharmacist, and physician, bringing a uniquely comprehensive perspective to patient care and medical education. Dr. Busti is dedicated to advancing evidence-based medicine and helping clinicians understand the underlying “why” behind clinical decisions to improve patient outcomes. About This Channel: This content is created by Anthony Busti, MD, PharmD, MSc, FAHA, FNLA, a board-certified physician with training at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and University of Oxford and a medical educator for healthcare professionals and students. All material is based on current medical literature and evidence-based guidelines that align with principles of evidence-based medicine (EBM) and Evidence-Based Healthcare (EBHC). Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. It does not replace individualized evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified health provider with questions about a medical condition and never delay care because of educational content.

25 de may de 202627 min
episode Tinnitus Explained: Symptom vs Diagnosis artwork

Tinnitus Explained: Symptom vs Diagnosis

Tinnitus explained clearly—This Is Why it matters clinically with Dr. Busti. Understanding tinnitus as a symptom, not a diagnosis, changes how you think, communicate, and manage patients. In this episode, Dr. Busti breaks down the meaning of tinnitus, its clinical implications, and how proper terminology drives better clinical reasoning. From pathophysiology to medication causes and key descriptors like pulsatile and unilateral tinnitus, this is a foundational concept every healthcare professional must master. This Is Why terminology is more than vocabulary—it’s a tool for thinking. Topics Covered: - What tinnitus actually means clinically - Why tinnitus is a symptom, not a diagnosis - Common patient descriptions of tinnitus - Pathophysiology and brain compensation - Pulsatile vs non-pulsatile tinnitus - Unilateral vs bilateral tinnitus significance - Medication-induced tinnitus causes - Aminoglycosides, loop diuretics, salicylates - Correct pronunciation and why it matters - Clinical reasoning approach to tinnitus - Real-world coping strategies (sound masking) - Cultural references and patient perspective The goal = make medical education easy and clinically relevant. 👉 Access bonus materials and downloads from this episode at: https://www.thisiswhy.health/topics/tinnitus-explained-symptom-vs-diagnosis-medical-terminology 👉 Get more with a free membership at https://www.thisiswhy.health/ - Access free downloads from our videos  - Access deep dive content from Dr. Busti - Organize content via playlists & collections - Join live Q&A - Receive member newsletters - Coupons & discounts for exam prep resources 👍 If this helped you, please like, subscribe, and share it with a classmate or colleague. That will help this new channel continue producing free, high-yield medical education content. #tinnitus #tinnitusmeaning #clinicalreasoning #hearingloss #Dr Busti Speaker: Anthony Busti, MD, PharmD, MSc, FAHA, FNLA, is a licensed healthcare professional and medical educator with over 30 years of experience in clinical practice and academic teaching. He has trained and practiced as a nurse, pharmacist, and physician, bringing a uniquely comprehensive perspective to patient care and medical education. Dr. Busti is dedicated to advancing evidence-based medicine and helping clinicians understand the underlying “why” behind clinical decisions to improve patient outcomes. About This Channel: This content is created by Anthony Busti, MD, PharmD, MSc, FAHA, FNLA, a board-certified physician with training at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and University of Oxford and a medical educator for healthcare professionals and students. All material is based on current medical literature and evidence-based guidelines that align with principles of evidence-based medicine (EBM) and Evidence-Based Healthcare (EBHC). Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. It does not replace individualized evaluation, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of a qualified health provider with questions about a medical condition and never delay care because of educational content.

21 de may de 202614 min