Evidence-Based Public Health: Moving Beyond Randomized Trials

Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are essential for evaluating the efficacy of clinical interventions, where the causal chain between the agent and the outcome is relatively short and simple and where results may be safely extrapolated to other settings. However, causal chains in public health int...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of public health (1971) 2004-03, Vol.94 (3), p.400-405
Hauptverfasser: Victora, Cesar G, Habicht, Jean-Pierre, Bryce, Jennifer
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container_title American journal of public health (1971)
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creator Victora, Cesar G
Habicht, Jean-Pierre
Bryce, Jennifer
description Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are essential for evaluating the efficacy of clinical interventions, where the causal chain between the agent and the outcome is relatively short and simple and where results may be safely extrapolated to other settings. However, causal chains in public health interventions are complex, making RCT results subject to effect modification in different populations. Both the internal and external validity of RCT findings can be greatly enhanced by observational studies using adequacy or plausibility designs. For evaluating large-scale interventions, studies with plausibility designs are often the only feasible option and may provide valid evidence of impact. There is an urgent need to develop evaluation standards and protocols for use in circumstances where RCTs are not appropriate.
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subjects Biological and medical sciences
Causality
Clinical outcomes
Clinical trials
Collaboration
Decision Making
Effect Modifier, Epidemiologic
Epidemiologic Research Design
Evidence based medicine
Health care policy
Humans
Internal validity
Intervention
Medical sciences
Miscellaneous
Nutrition
Public health
Public Health Matters
Public Health Practice
Public health. Hygiene
Public health. Hygiene-occupational medicine
Randomized controlled trials
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
Reproducibility of Results
Sound design
USA
Vaccines
Validity
title Evidence-Based Public Health: Moving Beyond Randomized Trials
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