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Statistics
A Journal of Theoretical and Applied Statistics
Volume 47, 2013 - Issue 2
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Original Articles

Modelling survival data using mixtures of frailties

Pages 453-464 | Received 27 Jun 2009, Accepted 20 Jun 2011, Published online: 04 Aug 2011
 

Abstract

Frailty models are often used to describe the extra heterogeneity in survival data by introducing an individual random, unobserved effect. The frailty term is usually assumed to act multiplicatively on a baseline hazard function common to all individuals. In order to apply the frailty model, a specific frailty distribution has to be assumed. If at least one of the latent variables is continuous, the frailty must follow a continuous distribution. In this paper, a finite mixture of continuous frailty distributions is used in order to describe situations in which one (or more) of the latent variables separates the population in study into two (or more) subpopulations. Closure properties of the unobserved quantity are given along with the maximum-likelihood estimates under the most common choices of frailty distributions. The model is illustrated on a set of lifetime data.

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