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| Question 1204414:  The effectiveness of a blood-pressure drug is being investigated. An experimenter finds that, on average, the reduction in systolic blood pressure is 54.2 for a sample of size 362 and standard deviation 17.4.
 Estimate how much the drug will lower a typical patient's systolic blood pressure (using a 95% confidence level).
 Enter your answer as a tri-linear inequality accurate to one decimal place (because the sample statistics are reported accurate to one decimal place).
 Answer by Theo(13342)
      (Show Source): 
You can put this solution on YOUR website! sample size is 362. sample mean is 54.2
 sample stansard deviation is 17.4
 using the t-score, critical t-score with 361 degrees of freedom (sample size minus 1) is equal to plus or minus 1.9666.
 t-score formula is t = (x-m)/s
 t is the t-score
 x is the critical mean
 m is the sample mean
 s is the standard error
 
 standard error = standard deviation / sqrt(sample size) = 17.4 / sqrt(362) = .9145.
 on the high side, t=(x-m)/s becomes 1.9666 = (x-54.2)/.9145.
 solve for x to get x = 1.9666 * .9145 + 54.2 = 55.9985
 on the low side, t = (x-m)/s becomes -1.9666 = (x-54.2)/.9245.
 solve for x to get x = -1.9666 * .9145 + 54.2 = 52.4015.
 round to 1 decimal place to get:
 the 95% confidence interval is between 52.4 and 56 points at 95% confidence level.
 your tri-linear equality would be 52.4 <= x <= 56.
 since the variable is continuous, then some sticklers will say 52.4 < x < 56 bcause the value can never be exactly a specific value.
 
 
 
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