Talk:Shang reviews of homeopathy: Difference between revisions
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==Impact of study== | |||
The study has been highly cited; by 2011, it had received more than 200 citations recorded in the ISI Web of Knowledge, but mostly in articles specifically discussing homeopathy and mostly in the CAM literature. The generalised implications have been explicitly picked up by a few, e.g. Finckh A, Tramer MR (2010)Osteoarthritis. (Small studies overestimate the benefit of therapies for OA ''Nature Rev Rheumatol'' 6:617-618 a meta-epidemiological study has revealed that the inclusion of small studies in meta-analyses of osteoarthritis interventions could lead to an overestimation of the benefit of these interventions. Does this mean meta-analyses should be restricted to trials with large sample sizes?) | |||
*Begg CB (1985) A measure to aid in the interpretation of published clinical trials ''Stat Med'' 4:1-9 PMID 3992068 | |||
*Sehon S, Stanley D (2010) Evidence and simplicity: why we should reject homeopathy ''J eval clin Pract'' 16:276-281 | |||
*Moreno SG ''et al.'' (2009) Novel methods to deal with publication biases: secondary analysis of antidepressant trials in the FDA trial registry database and related journal publications | |||
''BMJ'' 339 | |||
*Pandolfi M (2010) Homeopathy: ex nihilo fit nihil. ''Eur J Intern Med'' 21:147-8 PMID 20493411 |
Revision as of 12:05, 23 March 2011
Impact of study
The study has been highly cited; by 2011, it had received more than 200 citations recorded in the ISI Web of Knowledge, but mostly in articles specifically discussing homeopathy and mostly in the CAM literature. The generalised implications have been explicitly picked up by a few, e.g. Finckh A, Tramer MR (2010)Osteoarthritis. (Small studies overestimate the benefit of therapies for OA Nature Rev Rheumatol 6:617-618 a meta-epidemiological study has revealed that the inclusion of small studies in meta-analyses of osteoarthritis interventions could lead to an overestimation of the benefit of these interventions. Does this mean meta-analyses should be restricted to trials with large sample sizes?)
- Begg CB (1985) A measure to aid in the interpretation of published clinical trials Stat Med 4:1-9 PMID 3992068
- Sehon S, Stanley D (2010) Evidence and simplicity: why we should reject homeopathy J eval clin Pract 16:276-281
- Moreno SG et al. (2009) Novel methods to deal with publication biases: secondary analysis of antidepressant trials in the FDA trial registry database and related journal publications
BMJ 339
- Pandolfi M (2010) Homeopathy: ex nihilo fit nihil. Eur J Intern Med 21:147-8 PMID 20493411
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