Cost-effectiveness analyses (CEA) of randomised controlled trials are a key source of information for health care decision makers. Missing data are, however, a common issue that can seriously undermine their validity. A major concern is that the chance of data being missing may be directly linked to the unobserved value itself [missing not at random (MNAR)]. For example, patients with poorer health may be less likely to complete quality-of-life questionnaires. However, the extent to which this occurs cannot be ascertained from the data at hand. Guidelines recommend conducting sensitivity analyses to assess the robustness of conclusions to plausible MNAR assumptions, but this is rarely done in practice, possibly because of a lack of practica...
Background: Missing data are common in end-of-life care studies, but there is still relatively littl...
Background: Missing data are common in end-of-life care studies, but there is still relatively littl...
Missing data due to loss to follow-up or intercurrent events are unintended, but unfortunately inevi...
Cost-effectiveness analyses (CEA) of randomised controlled trials are a key source of information fo...
Cost-effectiveness analyses (CEA) of randomised controlled trials are a key source of information fo...
Cost effectiveness analysis (CEA) of randomised trials are an important source of evidence for infor...
Missing data are a frequent problem in cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) within a randomised control...
Health economics studies with missing data are increasingly using approaches such as multiple imputa...
The authors would like to thank Professor Adrian Grant and the team at the University of Aberdeen (P...
Cost-effectiveness analyses (CEA) conducted alongside randomised trials provide key evidence for inf...
Cost-effectiveness analyses (CEA) conducted alongside randomised trials provide key evidence for inf...
The Author(s) 2014. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract Missing ...
Missing data are a common issue in cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) alongside randomised trials and...
Cost-Effectiveness Analyses (CEAs) alongside randomised controlled trials (RCTs) are increasingly of...
Cost-effectiveness analyses (CEAs) alongside randomised controlled trials (RCTs) are increasingly de...
Background: Missing data are common in end-of-life care studies, but there is still relatively littl...
Background: Missing data are common in end-of-life care studies, but there is still relatively littl...
Missing data due to loss to follow-up or intercurrent events are unintended, but unfortunately inevi...
Cost-effectiveness analyses (CEA) of randomised controlled trials are a key source of information fo...
Cost-effectiveness analyses (CEA) of randomised controlled trials are a key source of information fo...
Cost effectiveness analysis (CEA) of randomised trials are an important source of evidence for infor...
Missing data are a frequent problem in cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) within a randomised control...
Health economics studies with missing data are increasingly using approaches such as multiple imputa...
The authors would like to thank Professor Adrian Grant and the team at the University of Aberdeen (P...
Cost-effectiveness analyses (CEA) conducted alongside randomised trials provide key evidence for inf...
Cost-effectiveness analyses (CEA) conducted alongside randomised trials provide key evidence for inf...
The Author(s) 2014. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com Abstract Missing ...
Missing data are a common issue in cost-effectiveness analysis (CEA) alongside randomised trials and...
Cost-Effectiveness Analyses (CEAs) alongside randomised controlled trials (RCTs) are increasingly of...
Cost-effectiveness analyses (CEAs) alongside randomised controlled trials (RCTs) are increasingly de...
Background: Missing data are common in end-of-life care studies, but there is still relatively littl...
Background: Missing data are common in end-of-life care studies, but there is still relatively littl...
Missing data due to loss to follow-up or intercurrent events are unintended, but unfortunately inevi...