| Literature DB >> 31426126 |
Andrew W Brown1, Douglas G Altman2, Tom Baranowski3, J Martin Bland4, John A Dawson5, Nikhil V Dhurandhar5, Shima Dowla6, Kevin R Fontaine7, Andrew Gelman8, Steven B Heymsfield9, Wasantha Jayawardene1, Scott W Keith10, Theodore K Kyle11, Eric Loken12, J Michael Oakes13, June Stevens14, Diana M Thomas15, David B Allison16.
Abstract
Being able to draw accurate conclusions from childhood obesity trials is important to make advances in reversing the obesity epidemic. However, obesity research sometimes is not conducted or reported to appropriate scientific standards. To constructively draw attention to this issue, we present 10 errors that are commonly committed, illustrate each error with examples from the childhood obesity literature, and follow with suggestions on how to avoid these errors. These errors are as follows: using self-reported outcomes and teaching to the test; foregoing control groups and risking regression to the mean creating differences over time; changing the goal posts; ignoring clustering in studies that randomize groups of children; following the forking paths, subsetting, p-hacking, and data dredging; basing conclusions on tests for significant differences from baseline; equating "no statistically significant difference" with "equally effective"; ignoring intervention study results in favor of observational analyses; using one-sided testing for statistical significance; and stating that effects are clinically significant even though they are not statistically significant. We hope that compiling these errors in one article will serve as the beginning of a checklist to support fidelity in conducting, analyzing, and reporting childhood obesity research.Entities:
Keywords: causal inference; childhood obesity; interventions
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31426126 PMCID: PMC7436851 DOI: 10.1111/obr.12923
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Obes Rev ISSN: 1467-7881 Impact factor: 9.213