The best cures for some problems--running an experiment longer or doing more aggressive follow-up to avoid a large proportion of censored values, or using a large enough sample size to lessen the problems of lengthy time intervals between successive noncensored survival times--are outside the scope of statistical analysis per se.
If the survival function is different for the different strata, then the characteristic used for stratification may be an implicit factor, and the separate analysis for each individual subsample may be more informative than an analysis of the entire sample. Stratification may also reveal correlations between censoring and strata.
A potential drawback with stratification is that one or more of the subsamples may be small in size, leading to problems with the reliability of the estimates. Also, the results for each subsample are generalizable to only a part of the sample population.
A specific functional (parametric) form for the survival distribution function, such as the Weibull distribution or the exponential distribution, or the Cox proportional hazards model, can be fitted to individual data, if a particular distribution makes sense a priori. (If the exponential model is appropriate, the graph of the log of the survival function [or the cumulative hazard function, which is -log(survival function)], against time should look like a straight line passing through the origin. If the Weibull distribution is appropriate, a graph of the log of the log of the survival function [or the log of the cumulative hazard function] against the log of time should look like a straight line.)
Elandt-Johnson and Johnson and Lawless discuss methods of fitting parametric survival models to data.
Like nonparametric methods, parametric methods make assumptions about the independence of censoring and survival, and can be affected by implicit factors, the presence of many censored values, or small sample sizes. In addition, parametric methods assume that the designated survival function is the correct one.
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