An important measure of the quality of research in any scientific discipline is reliability. Reliability is the ability to replicate an experiment and its results. As the science of emergency and acute care medicine develops, it becomes imperative for researchers in these fields to report accurately
Reporting methodology protocols in three acute care journals
β Scribed by Gabor D Kelen; Charles G Brown; Michael Moser; James Ashton; Douglas A Rund
- Book ID
- 104313415
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1985
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 520 KB
- Volume
- 14
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1097-6760
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β¦ Synopsis
Our study compared the reporting of methodology protocol details in three acute care journals, Annals of Emergency Medicine, Critical Care Medicine, and Journal of Trauma. Eleven criteria previously reported for evaluation of clinical trials in the medical literature were used. These were eligibility criteria, admission before allocation, random allocation, method of randomization, patients' blindness to treatment, blind assessment of outcome, treatment complications, loss to follow-up, statistical methods, statistical analysis, and power. All prospective, interventional, controlled trials appearing in the journals from January 1980 to June 1983 were identified. A total of 45 trials was found. Each study was read independently by two reviewers to determine whether each of the 11 criteria was reported clearly, reported unclearly, or not applicable. Disagreements were resolved by a third reader (adjudicator). The results are reported as the mean proportion of items clear-]y reported plus or minus the standard deviation: Annals of Emergency Medicine (n=16), 0.40 +_ 0.18; Journal of Trauma (n=18), 0.41 + 0.24; Critical Care Medicine (n = 11), 0.35 +_ 0.18. A one-way analysis of variance found no statistically significant difference between journals with respect to these proportions (P = . 75). The study reveals that these journals, as judged by these criteria, do not report enough methodologic information to allow assessment of bias-reducing techniques and statistical methodology, [Kelen
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
journals, reporting methods ## Methodology Reporting in Three Acute Care Journals: Replication and Reliability As the sciences of emergency medicine and acute care medicine develop, it becomes imperative for researchers in these fields to accurately and completely report the methodology of their