Doug Altman

Doug Altman

Professor Douglas Altman
Born (1948-07-12) 12 July 1948
London, UK
Residence United Kingdom
Nationality United Kingdom
Fields Statistician
Institutions Centre for Statistics in Medicine, Cancer Research UK, University of Oxford
Alma mater University of Bath
Known for Medical statistics
Notable awards Royal Statistical Society's Bradford Hill Medal (1997); BMJ Lifetime Achievement Award (2015)

Douglas Altman FMedSci (born London, UK, 12 July 1948) is an English statistician best known for his work on improving the reliability and reporting of medical research and for highly cited papers on statistical methodology.[1] He is professor of statistics in medicine at the University of Oxford, founder and Director of Centre for Statistics in Medicine and Cancer Research UK Medical Statistics Group,[2] and co-founder of the international Equator Network for health research reliability.

Professional career

Doug Altman graduated in statistics from the University of Bath. His first job was in the Department of Community Medicine at St Thomas's Hospital Medical School. He then spent 11 years working for the Medical Research Council's Clinical Research Centre where he worked almost entirely as a statistical consultant in a wide variety of medical areas. In 1988 Doug Altman became head of the newly formed Medical Statistics Laboratory (now Medical Statistics Group) at Imperial Cancer Research Fund (now Cancer Research UK), and in 1995 also became founding director of the Centre for Statistics in Medicine (CSM) in Oxford. In 1998 he was made Professor of Statistics in Medicine by the University of Oxford.

Altman is chief statistical advisor to the British Medical Journal (BMJ), where he is a member of the editorial "hanging committee", and co-convenor of the statistical Methods Group of the Cochrane Collaboration.

Work on research integrity

Altman is regarded as a leading authority on the execution and reporting of health research,[3] and has played a leading role in establishing better standards. He is one of the co-founders of the international EQUATOR health research reliability network, and a member of the CONSORT Group since 1999, a group dedicated to offering a standardised way for researchers to report trials.

He is also one of the original authors of the IDEAL framework for improving surgical research.[4]

Contributions to statistical education

Altman's publications on statistical education, many co-authored with his long-standing collaborator Martin Bland, are well-known among the medical profession, being noted for their practical relevance and clarity.[5] His textbook Practical Statistics for Medical Research, published in 1991, has sold 50,000 copies in hardback.[6]

Notable achievements

Altman is the author of over 450 papers in statistical methodology, with 11 being cited over 1,000 times. Among them is one Lancet paper,[7] which has been cited over 23,000 times and is ranked 29th in the Nature/Web of Science Top 100 most-cited research papers of all time.[8]

Altman was awarded the Bradford Hill Medal by the Royal Statistical Society for his contributions to medical statistics in 1997,[9] and a DSc from the University of London in the same year.

In 2015 Altman was awarded a lifetime achievement award by the BMJ, where he was credited by the editor, Dr Fiona Godlee, with having "done more than anyone else to encourage researchers to fully report what they actually did, warts and all, rather than letting the best be the enemy of the good or, worse, pretending that research is perfect".[10]

Altman is also editor in chief of Trials , a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences and the Royal Statistical Society.

Books authored

Books edited

Peer-reviewed articles

List of the over 396 articles by Doug Altman available through PubMed.

References

External links

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