Double-blinded trials are often considered the gold standard for research, but significant bias may result from unblinding of participants and investigators. Although the CONSORT guidelines discuss the importance of reporting evidence that blinding was successful , it is unclear what constitutes appropriate evidence. Among studies reporting methods to evaluate blinding effectiveness, many have compared groups with respect to the proportions correctly identifying their intervention at the end of the trial. Instead, we reasoned that participants\u27 beliefs, and not their correctness, are more directly associated with potential bias, especially in relation to self-reported health outcomes. During the Water Evaluation Trial performed in north...
In combination with randomization, blinding or masking is an important factor in randomized controll...
Regulatory authorities require that the sample size of a confirmatory trial is calculated prior to t...
In their paper discussing the importance of double-blinding in controlled trials, Furberg and Solima...
The search for new treatments and testing of new ideas begins in the laboratory and then established...
‘Blinding’ involves concealing knowledge of which trial participants received the interventions from...
'Blinding' involves concealing knowledge of which trial participants received the interventions from...
The feature of being ‘double blind’, where neither patients nor physicians are aware of who receives...
The interaction between the patient\u27s expected outcome of an intervention and the inherent effect...
AbstractBlinding is a methodologic safeguard of treatment evaluation, yet severely understudied empi...
Objectives To study the impact of blinding on estimated treatment effects, and their variation betwe...
It is well known that the outcome of an intervention is affected both by the inherent effects of the...
The CONSORT statement recommended that investigators should clearly report which key trial persons w...
Objectives To explore the theoretical justification for blinding in randomized trials and make recom...
AbstractThere are 4 sources of bias in clinical trials: investigator bias, patient expectation (plac...
BACKGROUND Recent methodologic evidence suggests that lack of blinding in randomized trials can r...
In combination with randomization, blinding or masking is an important factor in randomized controll...
Regulatory authorities require that the sample size of a confirmatory trial is calculated prior to t...
In their paper discussing the importance of double-blinding in controlled trials, Furberg and Solima...
The search for new treatments and testing of new ideas begins in the laboratory and then established...
‘Blinding’ involves concealing knowledge of which trial participants received the interventions from...
'Blinding' involves concealing knowledge of which trial participants received the interventions from...
The feature of being ‘double blind’, where neither patients nor physicians are aware of who receives...
The interaction between the patient\u27s expected outcome of an intervention and the inherent effect...
AbstractBlinding is a methodologic safeguard of treatment evaluation, yet severely understudied empi...
Objectives To study the impact of blinding on estimated treatment effects, and their variation betwe...
It is well known that the outcome of an intervention is affected both by the inherent effects of the...
The CONSORT statement recommended that investigators should clearly report which key trial persons w...
Objectives To explore the theoretical justification for blinding in randomized trials and make recom...
AbstractThere are 4 sources of bias in clinical trials: investigator bias, patient expectation (plac...
BACKGROUND Recent methodologic evidence suggests that lack of blinding in randomized trials can r...
In combination with randomization, blinding or masking is an important factor in randomized controll...
Regulatory authorities require that the sample size of a confirmatory trial is calculated prior to t...
In their paper discussing the importance of double-blinding in controlled trials, Furberg and Solima...