Reporting Implementation in Randomized Trials: Proposed Additions to the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials Statement
- 1 April 2007
- journal article
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 97 (4) , 630-633
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.2006.094169
Abstract
Randomized controlled trials of public health interventions are often complex: practitioners may not deliver interventions as researchers intended, participants may not initiate interventions and may not behave as expected, and interventions and their effects may vary with environmental and social context. Reports of randomized controlled trials can be misleading when they omit information about the implementation of interventions, yet such data are frequently absent in trial reports, even in journals that endorse current reporting guidelines. Particularly for complex interventions, the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) statement does not include all types of information needed to understand the results of randomized controlled trials. CONSORT should be expanded to include more information about the implementation of interventions in all trial arms.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reporting deficiencies in trials of abstinence-only programmes for HIV preventionAIDS, 2007
- Implementation Research Is Needed to Achieve International Health GoalsPLoS Medicine, 2006
- Low-Fat Dietary Pattern and Risk of Invasive Breast CancerJAMA, 2006
- Criteria for the systematic review of health promotion and public health interventionsHealth Promotion International, 2005
- The quality of randomized trial reporting in leading medical journals since the revised CONSORT statementContemporary Clinical Trials, 2005
- It might work in Oklahoma but will it work in Oakhampton? Context and implementation in the effectiveness literature on domestic smoke detectorsInjury Prevention, 2005
- Interventions for promoting smoking cessation during pregnancyPublished by Wiley ,2004
- Water for wound cleansingPublished by Wiley ,2002
- Treatment Integrity in Learning Disabilities Intervention Research: Do We Really Know How Treatments Are Implemented?Learning Disabilities Research & Practice, 2000
- Treatment fidelity in outcome studiesClinical Psychology Review, 1991