Resources

A page with Evidence Based Healthcare, biostatistics and epidemiology resources:






http://www.healthknowledge.org.uk/e-learning/statistical-methods
A fully furnished, higly reliable and useful website. Free online course on statistical methods for Health Care workers. Tutorial on Evidence Based Medicine.

http://www.cebm.net/
Centre for Evidence Based Medicine of the University of Oxford.

http://www.gradeworkinggroup.org/
GRADE wepage. GRADE is a system to rank evidence and recommendations for a given heath problem. It is used by most major medical journal and evidence based medicine organisation.


http://www.epibiostat.ucsf.edu/biostat/sampsize.html
The website of the Division of Biostatistics of the University of California, San Francisco


http://www.ucm.es/info/matbio/piembb/enlaces/Free%20Statistical%20Software.htm
A site from the Universidad Complutende de Madrid, with software links.




http://www.stat.ufl.edu/vlib/statistics.html
This is a vast list of links to many statistical resources, from academic and government departments to software or stat journals. Published by the University of Florida.

The OpenCourseWare (OCW) is an initiative started by the prestigious Massachusetts Institute of Technology. It is a free collection of courses previously lectured at the MIT. A great idea followed by other universities. MIT OCW offers a broad array of courses on many disciplines, and they have this course titled “Introduction to probability and Statistics”. Free of charge.

Another OCW resource, this time from Tufts University. Highly recommendable.

An online course from Harvard, titled Elements of Clinical Investigation. Charge ranges from $1,025 (non-credit) to $1950 (if you are aiming for graduate credit).

An introductory course on Statistics from Harvard. Same price as above.

A 785$ course offered by the University of California Berkeley. You can enroll anytime, and have 6 months to finish it.

A bilingual course (in English and Spanish) by Dr. Nicolas Padilla Raygoza, a Mexican pediatrician and epidemiologist. Free.
Two free online courses from the Carnegie Mellon University on Probability and Statistics and the other on Statistical Reasoning.

An Opencourseware free course offered by the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health. They also offer two courses on Methods in Biostatistics
 http://www.hrc.es/investigacion/inves_unidadbio.htm
Bioestatistics department at the Hospital Ramón y Cajal, Madrid, Spain. Content in Spanish. Glossary and statistical tools. Courses (in Madrid; no on-line courses so far, although they would be successful in my opinion). A page is devoted to diagnostic tests.