@article {Marson Smith118, author = {Phoebe Rose Marson Smith and Lynda Ware and Clive Adams and Iain Chalmers}, title = {Claims of {\textquoteleft}no difference{\textquoteright} or {\textquoteleft}no effect{\textquoteright} in Cochrane and other systematic reviews}, volume = {26}, number = {3}, pages = {118--120}, year = {2021}, doi = {10.1136/bmjebm-2019-111257}, publisher = {Royal Society of Medicine}, abstract = {Estimates of treatment effects/differences derived from controlled comparisons are subject to uncertainty, both because of the quality of the data and the play of chance. Despite this, authors sometimes use statistical significance testing to make definitive statements that {\textquoteleft}no difference exists between{\textquoteright} treatments. A survey to assess abstracts of Cochrane reviews published in 2001/2002 identified unqualified claims of {\textquoteleft}no difference{\textquoteright} or {\textquoteleft}no effect{\textquoteright} in 259 (21.3\%) out of 1212 review abstracts surveyed. We have repeated the survey to assess the frequency of such claims among the abstracts of Cochrane and other systematic reviews published in 2017. We surveyed the 643 Cochrane review abstracts published in 2017 and a random sample of 643 abstracts of other systematic reviews published in the same year. We excluded review abstracts that referred only to a protocol, lacked a conclusion or did not contain any relevant information. We took steps to reduce biases during our survey. {\textquoteright}No difference/no effect{\textquoteright} was claimed in the abstracts of 36 (7.8\%) of 460 Cochrane reviews and in the abstracts of 13 (6.0\%) of 218 other systematic reviews. Incorrect claims of no difference/no effect of treatments were substantially less common in Cochrane reviews published in in 2017 than they were in abstracts of reviews published in 2001/2002. We hope that this reflects greater efforts to reduce biases and inconsistent judgements in the later survey as well as more careful wording of review abstracts. There are numerous other ways of wording treatment claims incorrectly. These must be addressed because they can have adverse effects on healthcare and health research.}, issn = {2515-446X}, URL = {https://ebm.bmj.com/content/26/3/118}, eprint = {https://ebm.bmj.com/content/26/3/118.full.pdf}, journal = {BMJ Evidence-Based Medicine} }