Magic Mirror, On the Wall—Which Is the Right Study Design of Them All?—Part II

2017 Anesthesia & Analgesia 15 citations

Abstract

The assessment of a new or existing treatment or other intervention typically answers 1 of 3 central research-related questions: (1) “Can it work?” (efficacy); (2) “Does it work?” (effectiveness); or (3) “Is it worth it?” (efficiency or cost-effectiveness). There are a number of study designs that, on a situational basis, are appropriate to apply in conducting research. These study designs are generally classified as experimental, quasiexperimental, or observational, with observational studies being further divided into descriptive and analytic categories. This second of a 2-part statistical tutorial reviews these 3 salient research questions and describes a subset of the most common types of observational study designs. Attention is focused on the strengths and weaknesses of each study design to assist in choosing which is appropriate for a given study objective and hypothesis as well as the particular study setting and available resources and data. Specific studies and papers are highlighted as examples of a well-chosen, clearly stated, and properly executed study design type.

Keywords

MedicineMAGIC (telescope)Astronomy

MeSH Terms

Case-Control StudiesCohort StudiesCross-Sectional StudiesData InterpretationStatisticalHumansModelsStatisticalObservational Studies as TopicResearch Design

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Publication Info

Year
2017
Type
article
Volume
125
Issue
1
Pages
328-332
Citations
15
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

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15
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0
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11
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Cite This

Thomas R. Vetter (2017). Magic Mirror, On the Wall—Which Is the Right Study Design of Them All?—Part II. Anesthesia & Analgesia , 125 (1) , 328-332. https://doi.org/10.1213/ane.0000000000002140

Identifiers

DOI
10.1213/ane.0000000000002140
PMID
28609341

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%