Literature DB >> 22249907

Person mobility in the design and analysis of cluster-randomized cohort prevention trials.

Sam Vuchinich1, Brian R Flay, Lawrence Aber, Leonard Bickman.   

Abstract

Person mobility is an inescapable fact of life for most cluster-randomized (e.g., schools, hospitals, clinic, cities, state) cohort prevention trials. Mobility rates are an important substantive consideration in estimating the effects of an intervention. In cluster-randomized trials, mobility rates are often correlated with ethnicity, poverty and other variables associated with disparity. This raises the possibility that estimated intervention effects may generalize to only the least mobile segments of a population and, thus, create a threat to external validity. Such mobility can also create threats to the internal validity of conclusions from randomized trials. Researchers must decide how to deal with persons who leave study clusters during a trial (dropouts), persons and clusters that do not comply with an assigned intervention, and persons who enter clusters during a trial (late entrants), in addition to the persons who remain for the duration of a trial (stayers). Statistical techniques alone cannot solve the key issues of internal and external validity raised by the phenomenon of person mobility. This commentary presents a systematic, Campbellian-type analysis of person mobility in cluster-randomized cohort prevention trials. It describes four approaches for dealing with dropouts, late entrants and stayers with respect to data collection, analysis and generalizability. The questions at issue are: 1) From whom should data be collected at each wave of data collection? 2) Which cases should be included in the analyses of an intervention effect? and 3) To what populations can trial results be generalized? The conclusions lead to recommendations for the design and analysis of future cluster-randomized cohort prevention trials.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22249907     DOI: 10.1007/s11121-011-0265-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Prev Sci        ISSN: 1389-4986


  57 in total

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  9 in total

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Authors:  Kendra M Lewis; Samuel Vuchinich; Peter Ji; David L DuBois; Alan Acock; Niloofar Bavarian; Joseph Day; Naida Silverthorn; Brian R Flay
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6.  Direct and Mediated Effects of a Social-Emotional and Character Development Program on Adolescent Substance Use.

Authors:  Kendra M Lewis; Niloofar Bavarian; Frank J Snyder; Alan Acock; Joseph Day; David L Dubois; Peter Ji; Marc B Schure; Naida Silverthorn; Samuel Vuchinich; Brian R Flay
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7.  Using social-emotional and character development to improve academic outcomes: a matched-pair, cluster-randomized controlled trial in low-income, urban schools.

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  9 in total

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