Research methods Flashcards

(13 cards)

1
Q

What is the difference between an analytical study and a descriptive study?

A

An analytical study asks a question about a relationship between variables, while a descriptive study asks a general question about one variable.

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2
Q

What does PICO stand for?

A

Patient/problem, intervention, comparison, outcome.

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3
Q

What are the 3 questions to ask about a study?

A
  1. What is the aim?
  2. If there is an intervention, is it randomly allocated?
  3. When were the outcomes determined?
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4
Q

What are the strengths and weaknesses of an RCT?

A

Strengths: unbiased distribution of confounders, blinding can be done easily, randomization is better for statistical analyses

Weaknesses: expensive in terms of time and money, volunteer bias, ethical problems

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5
Q

What are the strengths and weaknesses of a crossover design?

A

Strengths: within-subject variability is reduced, blinding can still be done, analyses can assume randomization

Weaknesses: all participants receive no treatment/placebo at one point, washout periods can be long/unknown, can’t be done for permanent treatments

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6
Q

What are some strengths and weaknesses of a cross-sectional design?

A

Strengths: quick, easy, no ethical issues

Weaknesses: cannot infer causality, recall bias, distribution of confounders is biased, unequal group sizes

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7
Q

What are some strengths and weaknesses of a case-control study?

A

Strengths: quick, cheap, good for rarer conditions, fewer people are needed

Weaknesses: reliance on recall/records, confounders, selection of control groups is difficult, potential selection and recall biases

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8
Q

What are some strengths and weaknesses of a cohort study?

A

Strengths: ethically safe, subjects can be matched, can establish timing and directionality of events, eligibility criteria and outcomes can be standardized, easier and cheaper than an RCT.

Weaknesses: controls are difficult to identify, exposure may be linked to a confounder, blinding is difficult, no randomization, large sample sizes and follow-ups are needed for rare diseases.

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9
Q

What is the definition and formula for sensitivity?

A

The percent of individuals that will test positive out of all the people that have the condition.

True positives / (true positives + false negatives)

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10
Q

What is the definition and formula for specificity?

A

The percent of people that will test negative out of all the people that do not have the condition.

True negatives / (true negatives + false positives)

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11
Q

What are highly sensitive tests useful for?

A

Ruling conditions OUT.

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12
Q

What are highly specific tests useful for?

A

Ruling conditions IN.

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13
Q

What is the difference between a surrogate and a meaningful outcome?

A

Surrogate outcome: a lab measure or physical sign that is intended to be used as a substitute for a clinically meaningful endpoint
- i.e. lowered BP is a surrogate outcome for lowered CVD risk and prolonged life

Meaningful outcome: a clinically meaningful endpoint that is a direct measure of how the individual feels, functions, and survives
- i.e. a hip replacement has a direct effect on how someone feels via decreased pain and increased ROM

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