Assessing associations in observational studies
In this blog, Leonardo provides 5 interpretations that you should consider when you read or hear about a reported association in observational studies.
In this blog, Leonardo provides 5 interpretations that you should consider when you read or hear about a reported association in observational studies.
Outcome switching is a major problem in clinical trial reporting that distorts the evidence doctors and patients use to make real-world clinical decisions. Numerous prevalence studies have already shown this to be an extremely common problem, even in top medical journals. However the CEBM Outcome Monitoring Project (COMPare) has taken a new approach: writing to journals to correct the record on individual trials, in the hope that individual accountability and open data sharing will help solve this important problem. Our main question was: how will the journals respond? This blog tells the story of COMPare so far.
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