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 Randomised controlled trials for policy interventions: a review of reviews and  meta-regression Oliver S; Bagnall AM; Thomas J; Shepherd J; Sowden A; White I; Dinnes J; Rees R; Colquitt J; Oliver K; Garrett ZHealth Technol Assess  2010[Mar]; 14 (16): 1-165, iiiOBJECTIVES: To determine whether randomised controlled trials (RCTs) lead to the  same effect size and variance as non-randomised studies (NRSs) of similar policy  interventions, and whether these findings can be explained by other factors  associated with the interventions or their evaluation. DATA SOURCES: Two RCTs  were resampled to compare randomised and non-randomised arms. Comparable field  trials were identified from a series of health promotion systematic reviews and a  systematic review of transition for youths with disabilities. Previous  methodological studies were sought from 14 electronic bibliographic databases  (Applied Social Sciences Index and Abstracts, Australian Education Index, British  Education Index, CareData, Dissertation Abstracts, EconLIT, Educational Resources  Information Centre, International Bibliography of the Sociological Sciences, ISI  Proceedings: Social Sciences and Humanities, PAIS International, PsycINFO, SIGLE,  Social Science Citation Index, Sociological Abstracts) in June and July 2004.  These were supplemented by citation searching for key authors, contacting review  authors and searching key internet sites. REVIEW METHODS: Analyses of previous  resampling studies, replication studies, comparable field studies and  meta-epidemiology investigated the relationship between randomisation and effect  size of policy interventions. New resampling studies and new analyses of  comparable field studies and meta-epidemiology were strengthened by testing  pre-specified associations supported by carefully argued hypotheses. RESULTS:  Resampling studies offer no evidence that the absence of randomisation directly  influences the effect size of policy interventions in a systematic way. Prior  methodological reviews and meta-analyses of existing reviews comparing effects  from RCTs and non-randomised controlled trials (nRCTs) suggested that effect  sizes from RCTs and nRCTs may indeed differ in some circumstances and that these  differences may well be associated with factors confounded with design. No  consistent explanations were found for randomisation being associated with  changes in effect sizes of policy interventions in field trials. CONCLUSIONS:  From the resampling studies we have no evidence that the absence of randomisation  directly influences the effect size of policy interventions in a systematic way.  At the level of individual studies, non-randomised trials may lead to different  effect sizes, but this is unpredictable. Many of the examples reviewed and the  new analyses in the current study reveal that randomisation is indeed associated  with changes in effect sizes of policy interventions in field trials. Despite  extensive analysis, we have identified no consistent explanations for these  differences. Researchers mounting new evaluations need to avoid, wherever  possible, allocation bias. New policy evaluations should adopt randomised designs  wherever possible.|*Policy Making[MESH]|*Public Policy[MESH]|*Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic[MESH]|State Medicine[MESH]
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