The COMPare Project

*Recommendation
2015
Critical appraisal
Publication bias
Author

Steve Simon

Published

December 7, 2015

Figure 1. First page of research article

One of the many problems with medical publications is that researchers will choose which outcomes to report based on their statistical significance rather than their clinical importance. This can seriously bias your results. You can easily avoid this potential bias by specifying your primary and secondary outcome measures prior to data collection. Apparently, though, some researchers will change their minds after designating these outcome variables and fail to report on some of the outcomes and/or add new outcomes that were not specified prior to data analysis. How often does this occur? A group of scientists at the Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine at the University of Oxford are trying to find out.

Goldacre B, Dale A, Milosevic I, Mahtani K, Powell-Smith A, Drysdale H, Hartley P, Slade E, Heneghan C. The COMPare Project. Available in html format.

Earlier versions are here and here.