S. Kerry, and J. Bland. Family practice, 15 (1):
84-7(February 1998)2751<m:linebreak></m:linebreak>Dissenys de cluster.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: When practices are randomized in a trial and observations are made on the patients to assess the relative effectiveness of the different interventions, sample size calculations need to estimate the number of practices required, not just the total number of patients. OBJECTIVE: Our aims were to introduce the methodology for appropriate sample size calculation and discuss the implications for power. METHOD: A worked example from general practice is used. DISCUSSION: Designs which randomize practices are less powerful than designs which randomize patients to intervention groups, particularly where a large number of patients is recruited from each practice. Studies which randomize few practices should be avoided if possible, as the loss of power is considerable and simple randomization may not ensure comparability of intervention groups.
%0 Journal Article
%1 Kerry1998
%A Kerry, S M
%A Bland, J M
%D 1998
%J Family practice
%K FamilyPractice FamilyPractice:statistics&numericaldata Humans RandomizedControlledTrialsasTopic:statistics SampleSize StatisticsasTopic StatisticsasTopic:methods RCT
%N 1
%P 84-7
%T Trials which randomize practices II: sample size.
%U http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9527303
%V 15
%X BACKGROUND: When practices are randomized in a trial and observations are made on the patients to assess the relative effectiveness of the different interventions, sample size calculations need to estimate the number of practices required, not just the total number of patients. OBJECTIVE: Our aims were to introduce the methodology for appropriate sample size calculation and discuss the implications for power. METHOD: A worked example from general practice is used. DISCUSSION: Designs which randomize practices are less powerful than designs which randomize patients to intervention groups, particularly where a large number of patients is recruited from each practice. Studies which randomize few practices should be avoided if possible, as the loss of power is considerable and simple randomization may not ensure comparability of intervention groups.
@article{Kerry1998,
abstract = {BACKGROUND: When practices are randomized in a trial and observations are made on the patients to assess the relative effectiveness of the different interventions, sample size calculations need to estimate the number of practices required, not just the total number of patients. OBJECTIVE: Our aims were to introduce the methodology for appropriate sample size calculation and discuss the implications for power. METHOD: A worked example from general practice is used. DISCUSSION: Designs which randomize practices are less powerful than designs which randomize patients to intervention groups, particularly where a large number of patients is recruited from each practice. Studies which randomize few practices should be avoided if possible, as the loss of power is considerable and simple randomization may not ensure comparability of intervention groups.},
added-at = {2023-02-03T11:44:35.000+0100},
author = {Kerry, S M and Bland, J M},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/23aa0c02973fead8da4d2969e4a103f69/jepcastel},
interhash = {5e330a8384bbc079adf8d4703f759739},
intrahash = {3aa0c02973fead8da4d2969e4a103f69},
issn = {0263-2136},
journal = {Family practice},
keywords = {FamilyPractice FamilyPractice:statistics&numericaldata Humans RandomizedControlledTrialsasTopic:statistics SampleSize StatisticsasTopic StatisticsasTopic:methods RCT},
month = {2},
note = {2751<m:linebreak></m:linebreak>Dissenys de cluster},
number = 1,
pages = {84-7},
pmid = {9527303},
timestamp = {2023-05-04T09:00:45.000+0200},
title = {Trials which randomize practices II: sample size.},
url = {http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9527303},
volume = 15,
year = 1998
}