Suppose we choose one of these players at random. What is the probability that the player has arthritis?

Kaycee Roche

Kaycee Roche

Answered question

2021-08-07

A study in Sweden looked at former elite soccer players, people who had played soccer but not at the elite level, and people of the same age who did not play soccer. Here is a two-way table that classifies these individuals by whether or not they had arthritis of the hip or knee by their mid-50s.
Soccer experience Arthritis Did not  Elite  Non-elite  play  Total  Yes 1092443 No 61206548815 Total 71215572858
Suppose we choose one of these players at random. What is the probability that the player has arthritis?

Answer & Explanation

Tuthornt

Tuthornt

Skilled2021-08-08Added 107 answers

We note that 10 players were elite players with arthritis, 9 players were non-elite players with arthritis and 24 players with arthritis did not play.
The probability is the number of favorable outcomes divided by the number of possible outcomes.
The probability of a player having arthritis is then the total number of players with arthritis divided by the sample size:
P(arthritis)=# of favorable outcomes/# of possible outcomes=(10+9+24)/(10+61+9+206+24+548)=48/858 ~ 0.0501=5.01%

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