Propensity score (PS) methods have been used extensively to adjust for confounding factors in the statistical analysis of observational data in comparative effectiveness research. There are four major PS-based adjustment approaches: PS matching, PS stratification, covariate adjustment by PS, and PS-based inverse probability weighting (IPW). Though covariate adjustment by PS is one of the most frequently used PS-based methods in clinical research, the conventional variance estimation of the treatment effects estimate under covariate adjustment by PS is biased. As Stampf et al. have shown, this bias in variance estimation is likely to lead to invalid statistical inference and could result in erroneous public health conclusions (e.g. food and ...
In observational studies, treatment assignment is a nonrandom process and treatment groups may not b...
Randomised controlled trials (RCTs), while the golden standard of estimating causal effects in clini...
In observational studies, treatment assignment is a nonrandom process and treatment groups may not b...
Propensity scores (PS) are an increasingly popular method to adjust for confounding in observational...
Propensity scores (PS) are an increasingly popular method to adjust for confounding in observational...
Inferences about intended effects of treatments are ideally investigated using randomized control tr...
Propensity scores (PS) are an increasingly popular method to adjust for confounding in observational...
There is an increasing interest in the use of propensity score (PS) methods for confounding control,...
Treatment effects, especially when comparing two or more therapeutic alternatives as in comparative ...
Treatment effects, especially when comparing two or more therapeutic alternatives as in comparative ...
In individually randomised controlled trials, adjustment for baseline characteristics is often under...
The assessment of treatment effects from observational studies may be biased with patients not rando...
In most observational studies, treatments or other "exposures" (in an epidemiologic sense) do not oc...
In most observational studies, treatments or other "exposures" (in an epidemiologic sense) do not oc...
Propensity score methods are increasingly used to estimate the effect of a treatment or exposure on ...
In observational studies, treatment assignment is a nonrandom process and treatment groups may not b...
Randomised controlled trials (RCTs), while the golden standard of estimating causal effects in clini...
In observational studies, treatment assignment is a nonrandom process and treatment groups may not b...
Propensity scores (PS) are an increasingly popular method to adjust for confounding in observational...
Propensity scores (PS) are an increasingly popular method to adjust for confounding in observational...
Inferences about intended effects of treatments are ideally investigated using randomized control tr...
Propensity scores (PS) are an increasingly popular method to adjust for confounding in observational...
There is an increasing interest in the use of propensity score (PS) methods for confounding control,...
Treatment effects, especially when comparing two or more therapeutic alternatives as in comparative ...
Treatment effects, especially when comparing two or more therapeutic alternatives as in comparative ...
In individually randomised controlled trials, adjustment for baseline characteristics is often under...
The assessment of treatment effects from observational studies may be biased with patients not rando...
In most observational studies, treatments or other "exposures" (in an epidemiologic sense) do not oc...
In most observational studies, treatments or other "exposures" (in an epidemiologic sense) do not oc...
Propensity score methods are increasingly used to estimate the effect of a treatment or exposure on ...
In observational studies, treatment assignment is a nonrandom process and treatment groups may not b...
Randomised controlled trials (RCTs), while the golden standard of estimating causal effects in clini...
In observational studies, treatment assignment is a nonrandom process and treatment groups may not b...