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Evidence-Based Medicine 2009;14:132-134; doi:10.1136/ebm.14.5.132
Copyright © 2009 by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.

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EBM notebook

Writing a research article that is "fit for purpose": EQUATOR Network and reporting guidelines

Iveta Simera, Douglas G Altman

Centre for Statistics in Medicine, Oxford, UK

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

Clinical practice and public health policy decisions depend on high-quality information about research findings. However, growing evidence shows widespread deficiencies in the reporting of health research studies. Problematic issues include (but are not limited to) non-reporting or delayed reporting of entire studies;1 omission of crucial information in the description of research methods2 and interventions;3 selective reporting of only some outcomes;4 presenting data and graphs in confusing and misleading ways;5 and omissions from or misinterpretation of results in abstracts.6 These deficiencies have serious consequences for clinical practice, research, policy making, and ultimately for patients.

We illustrate the seriousness of the problem with several examples. In 1999, Drummond Rennie highlighted several systematic reviews7 8 9 that had identified multiple non-transparent publications of the same trials; this publication bias artificially created an impression of much larger support for the efficacy of studied interventions.10 More recently, Dwan et al summarised the evidence from 16 . . . [Full text of this article]


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