- General welcome
I am delighted to welcome you to LSHTM and to the MSc Medical Statistics. We hope that you will find studying with us to be an enjoyable and stimulating experience. The year ahead will be very full, but exciting. LSHTM has a diverse student population from a wide range of backgrounds, and teaching staff who are all active researchers in their field. You will find that you will learn a lot from each other as well as from formal teaching.
If you have any questions or problems then please email me at MedStats_PD@lshtm.ac.uk and I will do all I can to help.
Melissa Neuman, Programme Director
- Welcome Week
In addition to School-wide sessions, there will be a specific introduction to the MSc Medical Statistics. Further sessions during the week will introduce you to the staff, MSc and LSHTM. Our formal teaching also begins in Welcome Week, with the first two sessions of Foundations of Medical Statistics, and the first session of Introduction to Statistical Computing.
Please note that all new students, including those studying part-time, are expected to attend this first week in full.
- Personal tutors
At the start of the programme you will be allocated a personal tutor whom you will meet regularly with throughout the year. This tutor will support you throughout the programme discussing and advising you on academic and pastoral matters (if needed). Where possible we try to match personal tutors to the student鈥檚 background and areas of interest. To enable us to do this as effectively as possible, we ask that you to give us an overview of your background and interests by Wednedsay 18th September.
- Pentacells
When you arrive at LSHTM, your Programme Director will invite you to participate in a Pentacell, an activity that strengthens the School community, increases our wellbeing and forwards our goal of improving global health. The idea is deceptively simple 鈥 five students meet weekly for five weeks and listen to each other鈥檚 ideas and perspectives. It鈥檚 not compulsory but is strongly recommended by our School's Director, Liam Smeeth, Programme Directors, Student Support Services and former students.
Feedback from previous students:
鈥淚t was nice to be able to connect with people on my programme that I wouldn't necessarily have spoken to otherwise and it was a good way to make friends at the beginning.鈥
鈥淥ur Pentacell group chose not always to follow the exact guidelines for each session, and instead focused more on getting to know members of our programme better. I enjoyed the Pentacell experience we had, as it helped develop interpersonal relationships with those on my programme.鈥
鈥淚t gave me an opportunity to meet people on my programme. It also helped me develop interpersonal skills.鈥
鈥淰ery pleasant experience especially for me as an international student who moved to the UK for the 1st time.鈥
- Term 1
Term 1 starts on Monday 23rd September and runs until Friday 13th December. There is a one-week 鈥榬eading week鈥 with no teaching sessions scheduled from Monday 4th - Friday 8th November.
During Term 1, you will study four compulsory modules. In three of these, you will be studying alongside students from other MSc programmes (mainly MSc Health Data Science); in the remaining one, you will be studying with other Medical Statistics students only. All Term 1 formal teaching takes place on Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays. Wednesday are generally free for self-directed study.
Most modules will have live or pre-recorded lectures, and a number of live in-person practical sessions. For modules with pre-recorded lectures, it is expected that all students will have listened to the associated lecture before attending each practical session.
A broad draft Term 1 timetable for full-time study is given below.
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday AM Foundations of Medical Statistics Introduction to Statistical Computing / Foundations of Medical Statistics Introduction to Statistical Computing Concepts & Methods in Epidemiology PM Foundations of Medical Statistics Introduction to Statistical Computing / Foundations of Medical Statistics Clinical Trials Concepts & Methods in Epidemiology Reading week AM Foundations of Medical Statistics Foundations of Medical Statistics Introduction to Statistical Computing Concepts & Methods in Epidemiology PM Foundations of Medical Statistics Foundations of Medical Statistics Clinical Trials Concepts & Methods in Epidemiology - Terms 2 and 3
In Terms 2 and 3, you will study three compulsory modules, and two modules where you will have some choice. You will make your module choices during Term 1. Although most Medical Statistics students study the two recommended options (Analysis of Hierarchical and Other Dependent Data, and Causal Inference and Missing Data), there are several other modules that you may choose from. Your tutor and the Programme Director will guide you and help you make the right decision. Most of the Terms 2 and 3 teaching takes place on Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays and Fridays, although some modules may have teaching sessions on Wednesdays.
- Summer project
During June 鈥 August, all students undertake a summer research project for submission in early September. Medical Statistics projects usually involve the analysis of real life data from a clinical trial or epidemiological study. Occasionally, students will undertake a more methodological project which may involve simulations.
A list of potential project will be circulated in early February. You should discuss these with your tutor, and select three projects in order of your preference. The projects are then allocated in early March. It鈥檚 not always possible to assign each student their first choice, but we try to make sure that everyone is happy with their allocated projects.
Students may also arrange projects directly with the tutor, or may be provided with a project topic and data from an employer.
Project titles from previous years include:
- Estimation of treatment effects on toxicity outcomes within a breast radiotherapy trial
- Investigating the effects of total digital triage and remote consultation in UK general practices on prescribing patterns.
- Statistical or machine learning approaches to identify genetic variants associated with tuberculosis drug resistance
- Depression, quality of life, and treatment effect moderators: auxiliary analyses of SMaRT-Oncology 2 and SMaRT-Oncology 3 trial data
- Bayesian analysis of incomplete data from malaria epidemiological studies investigating pfHRP2/pfHRP3 gene deletions
- Growth curve modelling of children and adolescents living with HIV and chronic lung disease in Zimbabwe
- Clinical risk score for predicting persistent post-concussion symptoms among acutely concussed NCAA student athletes: a clinical prediction model development and internal validation study
- Effect of cardiac and vascular surgery on survival in the ETTAA observational study of people with chronic thoracic aortic aneurysms
- Patterns of medication adherence in a cluster-randomised trial of TB treatment
- Preparing for the MSc
As pre-course reading, we recommend that you go through the first three topics (and the associated quizzes 1-3) in our . We鈥檇 also recommend that you go through Quiz 10: 鈥楳ore complex questions鈥 鈥 questions 1-11. This is particularly important if you don鈥檛 have a maths-related degree, since these materials aren鈥檛 specifically taught on the course. Topics 4-9 are optional and will be taught on the course, but are provided for those wishing to get a head start.
There will be a maths refresher session in Welcome Week to go over the exercises and solutions, and to give you an opportunity to ask questions.
For those of you who haven鈥檛 studied mathematics recently, we also recommend buying a good maths textbook, e.g. Engineering Mathematics, 7th Edition. K Stroud, Palgrave Macmillan, 2013, and work through the relevant exercises.
We suggest that you buy only one of the recommended books below. Other textbooks may be recommend for different modules throughout the year.
Practical Statistics for Medical Research. Altman, Chapman and Hall, 1990, ISBN: 0412276305
Statistical Methods in Medical Research. Armitage, Berry and Matthews, Fourth Edition, Blackwell, 2001, ISBN: 9780632052578
Biostatistics: A Methodology for the Health Sciences. Van Belle, Fisher, Heagerty and Lumley, Second Edition, Wiley, 2004, ISBN: 978-0471031857
Essential Medical Statistics. Kirkwood and Sterne, Second Edition, Blackwell, 2003, ISBN: 9780865428713
- Information for new part-time students
You will attend the MSc two days per week 鈥 Monday and Tuesday during the first year and Thursday and Friday in the second year, though this may vary in Terms 2 and 3 depending on your module selection. More details will be given during Welcome Week, but also feel free to email the Programme Administrator at Rosanna.McNamara@lshtm.ac.uk if you have any questions ahead of then.
- Information for returning part-time students
Welcome Week is optional for second year part-time students, although it would be great if you could attend the staff-student introductions so you can get to know the new students.
Page last updated August 2024