Control groups appropriate for behavioral interventions

被引:40
作者
Whitehead, WE [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ N Carolina, Ctr Funct GI & Motil Disorders, Chapel Hill, NC 27599 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1053/j.gastro.2003.10.038
中图分类号
R57 [消化系及腹部疾病];
学科分类号
摘要
There are 4 sources of bias in clinical trials: investigator bias, patient expectation (placebo response), ascertainment bias (inadvertent selection of an unrepresentative sample), and nonspecific effects such as the normal waxing and waning of symptoms over time and the quality of the doctor-patient relationship. In drug trials, these biases are adequately controlled by comparing active to inert pills, randomly assigning subjects to treatments, blinding both the investigator and subject to group assignment, and testing subjects at multiple sites. However, there are special problems with conducting clinical trials of behavioral or psychological interventions that render these controls inadequate. It is impossible to blind the experimenter to which treatment is active, it is difficult to identify a control treatment that is inactive but just as credible to the subject, and doctor-patient relationship variables are more important than in drug trials. The inability to blind the experimenter can be circumvented by having an independent, blinded investigator assess the outcome, and doctor-patient effects can be controlled by using multiple, experienced therapists. The most difficult problem, identifying an appropriate control treatment, can be solved by adhering to 2 principles: the control treatment should be plausible, and it should not have a significant impact on the mechanism that is thought to explain the effectiveness of the investigational treatment. Investigators should confirm that these 2 goals have been achieved by monitoring expectation of benefit with a treatment credibility questionnaire, measuring changes in process variables (variables that reflect the presumed mechanism of treatment), and monitoring differential dropout rates.
引用
收藏
页码:S159 / S163
页数:5
相关论文
共 25 条
[1]  
Berghmans LCM, 1998, BRIT J UROL, V82, P181
[2]   Direction of temperature control in the thermal biofeedback treatment of vascular headache [J].
Blanchard, EB ;
Peters, ML ;
Hermann, C ;
Turner, SM ;
Buckley, TC ;
Barton, K ;
Dentinger, MP .
APPLIED PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY AND BIOFEEDBACK, 1997, 22 (04) :227-245
[3]   CREDIBILITY OF ANALOGUE THERAPY RATIONALES [J].
BORKOVEC, TD ;
NAU, SD .
JOURNAL OF BEHAVIOR THERAPY AND EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHIATRY, 1972, 3 (04) :257-260
[4]  
BURGIO KL, 1986, AM J OBSTET GYNECOL, V154, P58
[5]   Behavioral vs drug treatment for urge urinary incontinence in older women - A randomized controlled trial [J].
Burgio, KL ;
Locher, JL ;
Goode, PS ;
Hardin, JM ;
McDowell, BJ ;
Dombrowski, M ;
Candib, D .
JAMA-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION, 1998, 280 (23) :1995-2000
[6]   DETECTION OF NONCONTINGENT FEEDBACK IN EMG BIOFEEDBACK [J].
BURNETTE, MM ;
ADAMS, HE .
BIOFEEDBACK AND SELF-REGULATION, 1987, 12 (04) :281-293
[7]  
BURNS PA, 1993, J GERONTOL, V48, pM167
[8]   DELAYED RECTAL SENSATION WITH FECAL INCONTINENCE - SUCCESSFUL TREATMENT USING ANORECTAL MANOMETRY [J].
BUSER, WD ;
MINER, PB .
GASTROENTEROLOGY, 1986, 91 (05) :1186-1191
[9]  
Chiarioni G, 2002, AM J GASTROENTEROL, V97, P109
[10]  
Creed FH, 2001, GASTROENTEROLOGY, V120, pA115