| Literature DB >> 28069042 |
Anna Purna Basu1,2, Janice Elizabeth Pearse3, Tim Rapley4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Open Science is 'the movement to make scientific research, data and dissemination accessible to all levels of an inquiring society'. In the spirit of the Open Science movement, advance publication of protocols for clinical trials is now being advocated by BioMed Central, BMJ Open and others. Simultaneously, participants are becoming increasingly active in their pursuit and sharing of trial- and health- related information. Whilst access to protocols alongside published trial findings has clear benefits, advance publication of trial protocols is potentially problematic for trials of complex behavioural interventions. In this article we explain, with examples, how this could lead to unblinding, 'contamination' between intervention and control groups and deliberate biasing of assessment outcomes by participants. We discuss potential solutions and demonstrate the need for public debate about how this issue is best managed.Entities:
Keywords: Advance publication; Behaviour change; Clinical trials; Codesign; Complex interventions; E-Health; Open Science; Protocols; Therapy interventions; Trial registration
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28069042 PMCID: PMC5223296 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-016-1757-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Biassing of assessment outcomes: example from a codesign workshop
| Emma: ‘To be honest, like, I, from my experience, and I had a really hard time after Edgar was born, my second one. And, erm, had to fill in Edinburgh thing.’ | |
| Anna: ‘Yeah, the depression thing, yeah.’ | |
| Emma: ‘Yeah, and I totally, like, filled it in ‘cause I didn’t want to have depression (laughter), so like, I like, I Googled it and everything, you know, to see what score you needed. (Laughter) and, erm.‘ | |
| Anna: ‘Wow.’ | |
| Emma: ‘Well no, I Goo- ‘cause you can do it online can’t you? And then I came up with like 12.5 or something and you needed 11 to not have depression, so I was like… And then the health visitor came round so I was thinking, “Right, 11” …’ | |
| (Participant names have been changed to respect confidentiality) |