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  1. Missing data present a challenge to many research projects. The problem is often pronounced in studies utilizing self-report scales, and literature addressing different strategies for dealing with missing data...

    Authors: Fiona M Shrive, Heather Stuart, Hude Quan and William A Ghali
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:57
  2. It is often stated that external validity is not sufficiently considered in the assessment of clinical studies. Although tools for its evaluation have been established, there is a lack of awareness of their si...

    Authors: Gudrun Bornhöft, Stefanie Maxion-Bergemann, Ursula Wolf, Gunver S Kienle, Andreas Michalsen, Horst C Vollmar, Simon Gilbertson and Peter F Matthiessen
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:56
  3. Provision of evidence on costs alongside evidence on the effects of interventions can enhance the relevance of systematic reviews to decision-making. However, patterns of use of economics methods alongside sys...

    Authors: Ian Shemilt, Miranda Mugford, Michael Drummond, Eric Eisenstein, Jacqueline Mallender, David McDaid, Luke Vale and Damian Walker
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:55
  4. Stepped wedge randomised trial designs involve sequential roll-out of an intervention to participants (individuals or clusters) over a number of time periods. By the end of the study, all participants will hav...

    Authors: Celia A Brown and Richard J Lilford
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:54
  5. Providers use risk-adjustment systems to help manage healthcare costs. Typically, ordinary least squares (OLS) models on either untransformed or log-transformed cost are used. We examine the predictive ability...

    Authors: Maria Montez-Rath, Cindy L Christiansen, Susan L Ettner, Susan Loveland and Amy K Rosen
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:53
  6. Methods for describing one's confidence in the available evidence are useful for end-users of evidence reviews. Analysts inevitably make judgments about the quality, quantity consistency, robustness, and magni...

    Authors: Jonathan R Treadwell, Stephen J Tregear, James T Reston and Charles M Turkelson
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:52
  7. Meta-analysis has become a well-known method for synthesis of quantitative data from previously conducted research in applied health sciences. So far, meta-analysis has been particularly useful in evaluating a...

    Authors: Leon Bax, Ly-Mee Yu, Noriaki Ikeda, Harukazu Tsuruta and Karel GM Moons
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:50
  8. In this paper we compare the results in an analysis of determinants of caregivers' health derived from two approaches, a structural equation model and a log-linear model, using the same data set.

    Authors: Bin Zhu, Stephen D Walter, Peter L Rosenbaum, Dianne J Russell and Parminder Raina
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:49
  9. The interpretation of the results of active-control trials regarding the efficacy and safety of a new drug is important for drug registration and following clinical use. It has been suggested that non-inferior...

    Authors: Jean-Jacques Parienti, Renaud Verdon and Véronique Massari
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:46
  10. A recent paper found that terminal digits of statistical values in Nature deviated significantly from an equiprobable distribution, indicating errors or inconsistencies in rounding. This finding, as well as th...

    Authors: Monwhea Jeng
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:45
  11. The Levels of Evidence Rating System is widely believed to categorize studies by quality, with Level I studies representing the highest quality evidence. We aimed to determine the reporting quality of Randomis...

    Authors: Rudolf W Poolman, Peter AA Struijs, Rover Krips, Inger N Sierevelt, Kristina H Lutz and Mohit Bhandari
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:44
  12. A trial was commissioned to evaluate the effectiveness of larval therapy to debride and heal sloughy and necrotic venous leg ulcers. Larval therapy in the trial was to be delivered in either loose or bagged fo...

    Authors: ES Petherick, S O'Meara, K Spilsbury, CP Iglesias, EA Nelson and DJ Torgerson
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:43
  13. Citation counts are often regarded as a measure of the utilization and contribution of published articles. The objective of this study is to assess whether statistical reporting and statistical errors in the a...

    Authors: Pentti Nieminen, James Carpenter, Gerta Rucker and Martin Schumacher
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:42
  14. Disease specific mortality is often used as outcome rather than total mortality in clinical trials. This approach assumes that the classification of cause of death is unbiased. We explored whether use of funga...

    Authors: Anne K Due, Helle K Johansen and Peter C Gøtzsche
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:40
  15. Home ultraviolet B (UVB) treatment is a much-debated treatment, especially with regard to effectiveness, safety and side effects. However, it is increasingly being prescribed, especially in the Netherlands. De...

    Authors: Mayke BG Koek, Erik Buskens, Paul HA Steegmans, Huib van Weelden, Carla AFM Bruijnzeel-Koomen and Vigfús Sigurdsson
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:39
  16. Mathematical models are widely used for studying the dynamic of infectious agents such as hepatitis C virus (HCV). Most often, model parameters are estimated using standard least-square procedures for each ind...

    Authors: Rodolphe Thiébaut, Jérémie Guedj, Hélène Jacqmin-Gadda, Geneviève Chêne, Pascale Trimoulet, Didier Neau and Daniel Commenges
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:38
  17. The International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) is the framework developed by WHO to describe functioning and disability at both the individual and population levels.

    Authors: Alarcos Cieza, Szilvia Geyh, Somnath Chatterji, Nenad Kostanjsek, Bedirhan T Üstün and Gerold Stucki
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:36
  18. Conventional systematic review techniques have limitations when the aim of a review is to construct a critical analysis of a complex body of literature. This article offers a reflexive account of an attempt to...

    Authors: Mary Dixon-Woods, Debbie Cavers, Shona Agarwal, Ellen Annandale, Antony Arthur, Janet Harvey, Ron Hsu, Savita Katbamna, Richard Olsen, Lucy Smith, Richard Riley and Alex J Sutton
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:35
  19. Search filters or hedges play an important role in evidence-based medicine but their development depends on the availability of a "gold standard" – a reference standard against which to establish the performan...

    Authors: Margaret Sampson, Li Zhang, Andra Morrison, Nicholas J Barrowman, Tammy J Clifford, Robert W Platt, Terry P Klassen and David Moher
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:33
  20. Standard effect measures such as risk difference and attributable risk are frequently used in epidemiological studies and public health research to describe the effect of exposures. Recently, so-called impact ...

    Authors: Mandy Hildebrandt, Ralf Bender, Ulrich Gehrmann and Maria Blettner
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:32
  21. Systematic reviews and meta-analyses of test accuracy studies are increasingly being recognised as central in guiding clinical practice. However, there is currently no dedicated and comprehensive software for ...

    Authors: Javier Zamora, Victor Abraira, Alfonso Muriel, Khalid Khan and Arri Coomarasamy
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:31
  22. In order to reduce systematic errors (such as language bias) and increase the precision of the summary treatment effect estimate, a comprehensive identification of randomised controlled trials (RCT), irrespect...

    Authors: Daniel Galandi, Guido Schwarzer and Gerd Antes
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:30
  23. The reasoning behind evaluating medical interventions is that a hierarchy of methods exists which successively produce improved and therefore more rigorous evidence based medicine upon which to make clinical d...

    Authors: Harald Walach, Torkel Falkenberg, Vinjar Fønnebø, George Lewith and Wayne B Jonas
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:29
  24. The UK Medical Research Council has proposed that complex interventions should be tested in exploratory trials prior to a full-scale trial so as to better define the intervention and test the feasibility of co...

    Authors: Shaun Treweek and Frank Sullivan
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:28
  25. Systematic reviews (SRs) must be of high quality. The purpose of our research was to compare the methodological and reporting quality of original versus updated Cochrane SRs to determine whether updating had i...

    Authors: Beverley Shea, Maarten Boers, Jeremy M Grimshaw, Candyce Hamel and Lex M Bouter
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:27
  26. In order to better understand the similarities and differences in the motor behaviour of different groups of patients, their scores on the Motor Examination section of the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Sc...

    Authors: Pieter M Kroonenberg, Frans J Oort, Glenn T Stebbins, Sue E Leurgans, Esther Cubo and Christopher G Goetz
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:26
  27. In this paper we propose the use of the within-subject coefficient of variation as an index of a measurement's reliability. For continuous variables and based on its maximum likelihood estimation we derive a v...

    Authors: Mohamed M Shoukri, Nasser Elkum and Stephen D Walter
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:24
  28. Proper estimation of sample size requirements for cluster-based studies requires estimates of the intra-cluster correlation coefficient (ICC) for the variables of interest.

    Authors: Benjamin Littenberg and Charles D MacLean
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:20
  29. When subgroup analyses of a positive clinical trial are unrevealing, such findings are commonly used to argue that the treatment's benefits apply to the entire study population; however, such analyses are ofte...

    Authors: Rodney A Hayward, David M Kent, Sandeep Vijan and Timothy P Hofer
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:18
  30. Cluster randomization design is increasingly used for the evaluation of health-care, screeening or educational interventions. At the planning stage, sample size calculations usually consider an average cluster...

    Authors: Lydia Guittet, Philippe Ravaud and Bruno Giraudeau
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:17
  31. Intervention time series analysis (ITSA) is an important method for analysing the effect of sudden events on time series data. ITSA methods are quasi-experimental in nature and the validity of modelling with t...

    Authors: Stuart Gilmour, Louisa Degenhardt, Wayne Hall and Carolyn Day
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:16
  32. Probabilistic record linkage is widely used in epidemiology, but studies of its validity are rare. Our aim was to validate its use to identify births to a cohort of women, being drawn from a large cohort of pe...

    Authors: Dorothea Nitsch, Susan Morton, Bianca L DeStavola, Heather Clark and David A Leon
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:15
  33. The purpose of this study was to determine the inter-rater agreement between reviewers on the quality of abstract submissions to an annual national scientific meeting (Canadian Association of Emergency Physici...

    Authors: Brian H Rowe, Trevor L Strome, Carol Spooner, Sandra Blitz, Eric Grafstein and Andrew Worster
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:14
  34. Structural equation modelling (SEM) has been increasingly used in medical statistics for solving a system of related regression equations. However, a great obstacle for its wider use has been its difficulty in...

    Authors: Emil Kupek
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:13
  35. In January 2003, STAndards for the Reporting of Diagnostic accuracy studies (STARD) were published in a number of journals, to improve the quality of reporting in diagnostic accuracy studies. We designed a stu...

    Authors: Nynke Smidt, Anne WS Rutjes, Daniëlle AWM van der Windt, Raymond WJG Ostelo, Patrick M Bossuyt, Johannes B Reitsma, Lex M Bouter and Henrica CW de Vet
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:12
  36. Minimisation can be used within treatment trials to ensure that prognostic factors are evenly distributed between treatment groups. The technique is relatively straightforward to apply but does require running...

    Authors: Angie Wade, Huiqi Pan, Simon Eaton, Agostino Pierro and Evelyn Ong
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:11
  37. A quality assessment tool for diagnostic accuracy studies, named QUADAS, has recently been developed. Although QUADAS has been used in several systematic reviews, it has not been formally validated. The object...

    Authors: Penny F Whiting, Marie E Weswood, Anne WS Rutjes, Johannes B Reitsma, Patrick NM Bossuyt and Jos Kleijnen
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:9
  38. Modern day clinical practice demands evidence justifying our choice of treatment methods. Cumulative sum techniques (cusum) are amongst the simplest statistical methods known. They provide rapid analysis and i...

    Authors: Winston R Chang and Ian P McLean
    Citation: BMC Medical Research Methodology 2006 6:8

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