Hi, I previously posted this, but was asked to provide nicer format information. This is now included in the attachments.
My question is why Stata and Spss give so different estimates of the odds ratios and the random effect variance.
Is this due to Spss using PQL and Stata using a more sophisticated method? And might this also be related to the small number of level 1 units within level 2 units.
For those who want to know this is about age and education predicting health (there are 1701 individuals from 1479 households).
In Stata I tried several alternative options (as I did in Spss), but these do not matter so much, e.g. robust or not, mean/variance or mode/curvature gauss-hermite, integration 7 or 50. At least, that is what I tested.
Thanks a lot for any advice.
Hans
My question is why Stata and Spss give so different estimates of the odds ratios and the random effect variance.
Is this due to Spss using PQL and Stata using a more sophisticated method? And might this also be related to the small number of level 1 units within level 2 units.
For those who want to know this is about age and education predicting health (there are 1701 individuals from 1479 households).
In Stata I tried several alternative options (as I did in Spss), but these do not matter so much, e.g. robust or not, mean/variance or mode/curvature gauss-hermite, integration 7 or 50. At least, that is what I tested.
Thanks a lot for any advice.
Hans
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