Hi, this video has some related information on the difference between 'original' and 'standard' results.. The same is applicable for ranges as well. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-PhMb0Xh6xmY.html. For example, if we get the blood glucose measured in local laboratory, they may report the unit in mg/dL and they provide the range which is considered in normal range in the same units of mg/dL. This is called original range. However, if you are asked to report the same glucose value in a unit of 'mmol/L' (which is considered standard) - you would convert the number which is reported in mg/dL to mmol/L by using an appropriate conversion factor. We need to do the same with the ranges as well. These range values in mmol/L are considred standard ranges. Hope this helps.
Hi VamsiKrishna. If I understand your question correctly, you mean to say that you only have aCRF and no programming specification for SDTM dataset creation, how to map (program SDTM dataset). Answer: There are no guidelines on this. In this case, programmer will have to search for the raw dataset and variable names and understand the transformation requirements and program for the dataset.
It depends.. for a simple table\listing it generally takes 4-5 hours. for a complex table\listing we may need 8-12 hours. Same goes for SDTMs and ADaM, simple datasets may need around 5-6 hours and complex ones may take 1-2 days. It also depends on the project's setup, state of data cleanliness, availability of standard macros, support on those macros etc.
@@mycsg sir it seems like you keep on writing codes...do you also get free time like you completed one table till the time you get next table , you relax for 2 3 days . Or no free time and keep on writing one after another codes. Pls share this as i am lazy coder and inbetween every work i need enough time and cant handle too much work pressure. Before switching to clinical sas good to get idea about work pressure.
It depends again.. A clinical programmer's job is not just writing back-to-back code. It also involves understanding the study design aspects, keeping up to date with industry standards, writing specifications, learning new programming techniques, working with validation programmers to resolve any mismatches, working with statisticians to clarify things, working with data management team to get data cleaned.. and much more.. If you are looking for a job that challenges you and rewards you, you will like being a clinical programmer. Hope this helps!
thank you sooooo much!! These videos you are making are amazing!!!! maybe its just my shite speakers, but if you recorded better audio, it would make these perfect :)
We are not sure if you have subscribed to our channel, this has been already uploaded. Below is the link for video related to timing variables. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-3s5VejgBjBk.html