Amanote Research

Amanote Research

    RegisterSign In

How to Spot Bias and Other Potential Problems in Randomised Controlled Trials

Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry - United Kingdom
doi 10.1136/jnnp.2003.025833
Full Text
Open PDF
Abstract

Available in full text

Categories
PsychiatryMental HealthNeurologySurgery
Date

February 1, 2004

Authors
S C Lewis
Publisher

BMJ


Related search

Randomised Controlled Trials

Eye
MedicineArtsSensory SystemsOphthalmologyHumanities
1995English

How to Design Efficient Cluster Randomised Trials

British Medical Journal
Medicine
2017English

Marketing Trials, Marketing Tricks — How to Spot Them and How to Stop Them

Trials
MedicinePharmacology
2017English

Differential Dropout and Bias in Randomised Controlled Trials: When It Matters and When It May Not

British Medical Journal
Medicine
2013English

Failure to Address Potential Bias in Non-Randomised Controlled Clinical Trials May Cause Lack of Evidence on Patient-Reported Outcomes: A Method Study

BMJ Open
Medicine
2014English

Randomised Controlled Trials in General Practice

BMJ
1995English

Reporting Attrition in Randomised Controlled Trials

BMJ
2006English

Pmu14 - Comparison to Standard of Care: Modelisation of Potential Selection Bias for Active Reference in Randomised Clinical Trials

Value in Health
MedicineHealth PolicyPublic HealthOccupational HealthEnvironmental
2018English

The Impact of Outcome Reporting Bias in Randomised Controlled Trials on a Cohort of Systematic Reviews

BMJ
2010English

Amanote Research

Note-taking for researchers

Follow Amanote

© 2025 Amaplex Software S.P.R.L. All rights reserved.

Privacy PolicyRefund Policy