nr |
titel |
auteur |
tijdschrift |
jaar |
jaarg. |
afl. |
pagina('s) |
type |
1 |
A systematic review of studies reporting the development of core outcome sets for use in routine care
|
Kearney, Anna |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 34-43 |
artikel |
2 |
Authors arbitrarily used methodological approaches to analyze the quality of reporting in research reports: a meta-research study
|
Plenkovic, Mia |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 53-61 |
artikel |
3 |
Bypassing phase 2 in cancer drug development erodes the risk/benefit balance in phase 3 trials
|
Moyer, Hannah |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 134-140 |
artikel |
4 |
CONSORT Harms 2022 statement, explanation, and elaboration: updated guideline for the reporting of harms in randomized trials
|
Junqueira, Daniela R. |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 149-165 |
artikel |
5 |
COVID-19 trials were not more likely to report intent to share individual data than non-COVID-19 trials in ClinicalTrials.gov
|
Ramdjee, Bruno |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 10-17 |
artikel |
6 |
Development of an international glossary for clinical guidelines collaboration
|
Christensen, Rachel E. |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 84-91 |
artikel |
7 |
Editorial Board
|
|
|
|
158 |
C |
p. IFC |
artikel |
8 |
Editor's choice – June 2023
|
Tricco, Andrea C. |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. A1-A2 |
artikel |
9 |
Elicited clinician knowledge did not improve dementia risk prediction in individuals with mild cognitive impairment
|
Wang, Meng |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 111-118 |
artikel |
10 |
Empirical evaluation of the methods used in systematic reviews including observational studies and randomized trials
|
Cheurfa, Cherifa |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 44-52 |
artikel |
11 |
GRADE guidance 36: updates to GRADE's approach to addressing inconsistency
|
Guyatt, Gordon |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 70-83 |
artikel |
12 |
In Cochrane nutrition reviews assessment of dietary adherence varied considerably
|
Schwingshackl, Lukas |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 1-9 |
artikel |
13 |
Intracluster correlation coefficients from school-based cluster randomized trials of interventions for improving health outcomes in pupils
|
Parker, Kitty |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 18-26 |
artikel |
14 |
Irish funder guidance increased searching for, and uptake of, core outcome sets
|
Beecher, Claire |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 92-98 |
artikel |
15 |
Item response theory assumptions were adequately met by the Oxford hip and knee scores
|
Harrison, Conrad J. |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 166-176 |
artikel |
16 |
Item response theory may account for unequal item weighting and individual-level measurement error in trials that use PROMs: a psychometric sensitivity analysis of the TOPKAT trial
|
Harrison, Conrad J. |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 62-69 |
artikel |
17 |
Patient participation impacts outcome domain selection in core outcome sets for research: an updated systematic review
|
Dodd, Susanna |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 127-133 |
artikel |
18 |
Practical guide to the typical analysis of prognostic factors and biomarkers without the use of P-values
|
Jin, Yuxuan |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 179-184 |
artikel |
19 |
Presentation approaches for enhancing interpretability of patient-reported outcomes in meta-analyses: a systematic survey of Cochrane reviews
|
Zeng, Linan |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 119-126 |
artikel |
20 |
Quality of surgical patient-reported outcome measure validation studies is often deficient: a systematic review
|
Uimonen, Mikko |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 27-33 |
artikel |
21 |
Reporting standards for child health research were few and poorly implemented
|
Li, Qinyuan |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 141-148 |
artikel |
22 |
Should authors of overviews of systematic reviews invite the authors of the systematic reviews they analyzed to re-evaluate or validate their methodological analysis?
|
Faggion Jr., Clovis Mariano |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 177-178 |
artikel |
23 |
Systematic review finds “spin” practices and poor reporting standards in studies on machine learning-based prediction models
|
Andaur Navarro, Constanza L. |
|
|
158 |
C |
p. 99-110 |
artikel |
24 |
Table of Contents
|
|
|
|
158 |
C |
p. ii-iv |
artikel |