An evaluation of the quality of statistical design and analysis of published medical research: Results from a systematic survey of general orthopaedic journals

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Abstract

Background: The application of statistics in reported research in trauma and orthopaedic surgery has become ever more important and complex. Despite the extensive use of statistical analysis, it is still a subject which is often not conceptually well understood, resulting in clear methodological flaws and inadequate reporting in many papers. Methods. A detailed statistical survey sampled 100 representative orthopaedic papers using a validated questionnaire that assessed the quality of the trial design and statistical analysis methods. Results: The survey found evidence of failings in study design, statistical methodology and presentation of the results. Overall, in 17% (95% confidence interval; 10-26%) of the studies investigated the conclusions were not clearly justified by the results, in 39% (30-49%) of studies a different analysis should have been undertaken and in 17% (10-26%) a different analysis could have made a difference to the overall conclusions. Conclusion: It is only by an improved dialogue between statistician, clinician, reviewer and journal editor that the failings in design methodology and analysis highlighted by this survey can be addressed. © 2012 Parsons et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Parsons, N. R., Price, C. L., Hiskens, R., Achten, J., & Costa, M. L. (2012). An evaluation of the quality of statistical design and analysis of published medical research: Results from a systematic survey of general orthopaedic journals. BMC Medical Research Methodology, 12. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2288-12-60

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