© 2019, © 2019 American Statistical Association. Social and medical scientists are often concerned that the external validity of experimental results may be compromised because of heterogeneous treatment effects. If a treatment has different effects on those who would choose to take it and those who would not, the average treatment effect estimated in a standard randomized controlled trial (RCT) may give a misleading picture of its impact outside of the study sample. Patient preference trials (PPTs), where participants’ preferences over treatment options are incorporated in the study design, provide a possible solution. In this paper, we provide a systematic analysis of PPTs based on the potential outcomes framework of causal inference. We ...
Rationale, aims and objectives: Evidence shows a trend towards low enrollment in randomized clinical...
Objective - Preference-based instrumental variables (PP IV) designs can identify causal effects when...
BACKGROUND: We recently published a systematic review of different healthcare settings (such as outp...
© 2019, © 2019 American Statistical Association. Social and medical scientists are often concerned t...
Social and medical scientists are often concerned that the external validity of experimental results...
Making inferences about the causal effects is essential for public health and biomedical studies. Ra...
Making inferences about the causal effects is essential for public health and biomedical studies. Ra...
The concomitant problems of underenrollment and selective enrollment limit the efficiency of many ra...
The concomitant problems of underenrollment and selective enrollment limit the efficiency of many ra...
rating participant choice, provides unbiased estimates of the effects of the treatment or interventi...
Objective: To systematically review fully randomised patient preference trials and to explore the im...
rating participant choice, provides unbiased estimates of the effects of the treatment or interventi...
Objectives: To develop a conceptual framework of preferences for interventions in the context of ran...
Abstract. Self-selection can bias estimates of treatment effects from ran-domized experiments if one...
OBJECTIVE: Randomised controlled trials (RCT) are the gold standard to provide unbiased data. Howeve...
Rationale, aims and objectives: Evidence shows a trend towards low enrollment in randomized clinical...
Objective - Preference-based instrumental variables (PP IV) designs can identify causal effects when...
BACKGROUND: We recently published a systematic review of different healthcare settings (such as outp...
© 2019, © 2019 American Statistical Association. Social and medical scientists are often concerned t...
Social and medical scientists are often concerned that the external validity of experimental results...
Making inferences about the causal effects is essential for public health and biomedical studies. Ra...
Making inferences about the causal effects is essential for public health and biomedical studies. Ra...
The concomitant problems of underenrollment and selective enrollment limit the efficiency of many ra...
The concomitant problems of underenrollment and selective enrollment limit the efficiency of many ra...
rating participant choice, provides unbiased estimates of the effects of the treatment or interventi...
Objective: To systematically review fully randomised patient preference trials and to explore the im...
rating participant choice, provides unbiased estimates of the effects of the treatment or interventi...
Objectives: To develop a conceptual framework of preferences for interventions in the context of ran...
Abstract. Self-selection can bias estimates of treatment effects from ran-domized experiments if one...
OBJECTIVE: Randomised controlled trials (RCT) are the gold standard to provide unbiased data. Howeve...
Rationale, aims and objectives: Evidence shows a trend towards low enrollment in randomized clinical...
Objective - Preference-based instrumental variables (PP IV) designs can identify causal effects when...
BACKGROUND: We recently published a systematic review of different healthcare settings (such as outp...