Tiê P Yamato1, Chris G Maher2, Bruno T Saragiotto2, Tammy C Hoffmann3, Anne M Moseley2. 1. Musculoskeletal Division, The George Institute for Global Health, Sydney Medical School, The University of Sydney, Australia. Electronic address: tiparma@gmail.com. 2. Musculoskeletal Division, The George Institute for Global Health, Sydney Medical School, The University of Sydney, Australia. 3. Centre for Research in Evidence Based Practice, Faculty of Health Sciences and Medicine, Bond University, Queensland, Australia.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Incomplete descriptions of interventions are a common problem in reports of randomised controlled trials. To date no study has evaluated the completeness of the descriptions of physiotherapy interventions. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the completeness of the descriptions of physiotherapy interventions in a random sample of reports of randomised controlled trials (RCTs). DATA SOURCES: A random sample of 200 reports of RCTs from the PEDro database. STUDY SELECTION OR ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: We included full text papers, written in English, and reporting trials with two arms. We included trials evaluating any type of physiotherapy interventions and subdisciplines. DATA EXTRACTION AND DATA SYNTHESIS: The methodological quality was evaluated using the PEDro scale and completeness of intervention description using the Template for Intervention Description and Replication (TIDieR) checklist. The proportion and 95% confidence interval were calculated for intervention and control groups, and used to present the relationship between completeness and methodological quality, and subdisciplines. RESULTS: Completeness of intervention reporting in physiotherapy RCTs was poor. For intervention groups, 46 (23%) trials did not describe at least half of the items. Reporting was worse for control groups, 149 (75%) trials described less than half of the items. There was no clear difference in the completeness across subdisciplines or methodological quality. LIMITATIONS: Our sample were restricted to trials published in English in 2013. CONCLUSION AND IMPLICATIONS OF KEY FINDINGS: Descriptions of interventions in physiotherapy RCTs are typically incomplete. Authors and journals should aim for more complete descriptions of interventions in physiotherapy trials.
BACKGROUND: Incomplete descriptions of interventions are a common problem in reports of randomised controlled trials. To date no study has evaluated the completeness of the descriptions of physiotherapy interventions. OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the completeness of the descriptions of physiotherapy interventions in a random sample of reports of randomised controlled trials (RCTs). DATA SOURCES: A random sample of 200 reports of RCTs from the PEDro database. STUDY SELECTION OR ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA: We included full text papers, written in English, and reporting trials with two arms. We included trials evaluating any type of physiotherapy interventions and subdisciplines. DATA EXTRACTION AND DATA SYNTHESIS: The methodological quality was evaluated using the PEDro scale and completeness of intervention description using the Template for Intervention Description and Replication (TIDieR) checklist. The proportion and 95% confidence interval were calculated for intervention and control groups, and used to present the relationship between completeness and methodological quality, and subdisciplines. RESULTS: Completeness of intervention reporting in physiotherapy RCTs was poor. For intervention groups, 46 (23%) trials did not describe at least half of the items. Reporting was worse for control groups, 149 (75%) trials described less than half of the items. There was no clear difference in the completeness across subdisciplines or methodological quality. LIMITATIONS: Our sample were restricted to trials published in English in 2013. CONCLUSION AND IMPLICATIONS OF KEY FINDINGS: Descriptions of interventions in physiotherapy RCTs are typically incomplete. Authors and journals should aim for more complete descriptions of interventions in physiotherapy trials.
Authors: Tie Yamato; Chris Maher; Bruno Saragiotto; Anne Moseley; Tammy Hoffmann; Mark Elkins; Dina Brooks Journal: Physiother Can Date: 2016 Impact factor: 1.037
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