Abstract
It is widely held that random-effects summary effect estimates are more conservative than fixed-effects summaries in epidemiologic meta-analysis. This view is based on the fact that random-effects summaries have higher estimated variances and, consequently, wider confidence intervals than fixed-effects summaries when there is evidence of appreciable heterogeneity among the results from the individual studies. In such instances, however, the random-effects point estimates are not invariably closer to the null value nor are their p values invariably larger than those of fixed-effects summaries. Thus, random-effects summaries are not predictably conservative according to either of these two connotations of the term. The authors give an example from a meta-analysis of water chlorination and cancer in which the random-effects summaries are less conservative in both of these alternative senses and possibly more biased than the fixed-effects summaries. The discussion of when to use random effects and when to use fixed effects in computing summary estimates should be replaced by a discussion of whether summary estimates should be computed at all when the studies are not methodologically comparable, when their results are discernibly heterogeneous, or when there is evidence of publication bias.
Keywords
Affiliated Institutions
Related Publications
Meta-Analysis: A Comparison of Approaches
Preface Introduction Theory: Statistical Methods of Meta-Analysis Effect Sizes Families of Effect Sizes The r Family: Correlation Coefficients as Effect Sizes The d Family: Stan...
Fixed- and random-effects models in meta-analysis.
There are 2 families of statistical procedures in meta-analysis: fixed- and randomeffects procedures. They were developed for somewhat different inference goals: making inferenc...
Meta-analytic interval estimation for bivariate correlations.
The currently available meta-analytic methods for correlations have restrictive assumptions. The fixed-effects methods assume equal population correlations and exhibit poor perf...
Meta-analytic interval estimation for standardized and unstandardized mean differences.
The fixed-effects (FE) meta-analytic confidence intervals for unstandardized and standardized mean differences are based on an unrealistic assumption of effect-size homogeneity ...
A basic introduction to fixed-effect and random-effects models for meta-analysis
There are two popular statistical models for meta-analysis, the fixed-effect model and the random-effects model. The fact that these two models employ similar sets of formulas t...
Publication Info
- Year
- 1999
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 150
- Issue
- 5
- Pages
- 469-475
- Citations
- 335
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a010035