Article Text

Download PDFPDF
A spotter’s guide to study designs
  1. Paul Glasziou,
  2. Carl Heneghan
  1. Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine; University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

    Statistics from Altmetric.com

    Request Permissions

    If you wish to reuse any or all of this article please use the link below which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service. You will be able to get a quick price and instant permission to reuse the content in many different ways.

    When searching for evidence to answer our clinical questions, the ability to rapidly recognise different types of studies is helpful for finding the one that best answers the question. The “Levels of evidence” tables make suggestions for which design is best for which type of question. For instance, you would naturally consider a randomised controlled trial as the most appropriate study design for intervention decisions. But for potential harms of interventions, we may need case-control studies. And for aetiology we often need to use cohort studies: you wouldn’t randomise someone to cigarette smoking to see if they did worse—this would also be unethical. But you would want investigators to follow up cigarette smokers and non-smokers for a long time, just as Richard Doll did.1

    This short article is a brief guide to the different study types and their advantages and disadvantages. In trying to understand why the investigators chose a particular study type, several factors need to be taken into account. The first thing …

    View Full Text