Stats
Forest plots (January 12, 2005) Category:
Systematic overviews
Many meta-analyses use a graph known as a forest plot. I was always confused by the funny
squares in a forest plot, so I looked for a description. An example of a forest plot appears
in
-
Acetylcysteine for prevention of contrast-induced nephropathy after intravascular
angiography: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Bagshaw SM, Ghali WA. BMC Med 2004:
2(1); 38.
[Medline] [Abstract]
[Full text]
[PDF]
and because this is an open-access article, I can reproduce the graph here.

Here is what the User's Guide for RevMan (software created by the Cochrane Collaboration)
says about forest plots:
The graph is a forest plot where the confidence interval (CI) for each study is
represented by a horizontal line and the point estimate is represented by a square. The
size of the square corresponds to the weight of the study in the meta-analysis. The
confidence interval for totals are represented by a diamond shape. The scale used on the
graph depends on the statistical method. Dichotomous data (except for risk differences)
are displayed on a logarithmic scale. Continuous data and risk differences are displayed
on a linear scale. Generic inverse variance data are displayed on either a logarithmic
scale or a linear scale depending on the settings in RevMan. --
http://www.cc-ims.net/download/revman/Documentation/User%20guide.pdf (page 36).
07/08/2008.