Study designs: experimental Flashcards
randomised control studies are most similar to _____ in that
but the main difference is
prospective control studies
start with exposure, look into future to see outcome
unlike PCS, exposure is RANDOMLY ALLOCATED
ethics associated with random allocation?
if exposure is harmful - eg smoking - then random allocation would be unethical
how do RCTs control for selection bias
allocation concealment
how do RCTs control for performance and detection bias
double blind
addition to double blind?
using a placebo
use of placebo is aka
double dummy effect
confounding resulting from use of placebo? name and define
placebo effect: person think’s placebo’s real, acts accordingly
ethics associated with a placebo
people might think they’re having a life saving treatment when they’re not
control for attrition bias?
make sure patients commit to experiment before exposure is allocated.
crossover trial - describe
randomly allocated to one of two groups
group 1 is exp first, group 2 control. outcome measured
washout period
group 2 is then exp, group 1 is control. measure outcome
2 advantages of crossover trial
sample size essentially doubled
patients serve as own controls
disadvantage of crossover trial
ethics
n of 1 trial
like crossover but just one person
disadvantage of n of 1 trial
one person so limited generalisability
desribe cluster RCT/community trials
unit of randomisation is a cluster of people - eg. patients of a particular GP, hospitals