Welcome to the Podiatry Arena forums, for communication between foot health professionals about podiatry and related topics.
You are currently viewing our podiatry forum as a guest which gives you limited access to view all podiatry discussions and access our other features. By joining our free global community of Podiatrists and other interested foot health care professionals you will have access to post podiatry topics (answer and ask questions), communicate privately with other members (PM), upload content, view attachments, receive a weekly email update of new discussions, earn CPD points and access many other special features. Registered users do not get displayed the advertisments in posted messages. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our global Podiatry community today!
If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact us.
Hi,
I am currently studying at the University of South Australia and would love to find out if anyone new of some good and bad examples of experimental papers published over the past few years..
I'm trying to get a feel for key indicators such as Authors, headings or topics that can easily differentiate between a well written reliable experiment and one with a lot of bias.
Both studies probably got the opposite results of what they reported.
__________________ Craig Payne
__________________________________________________ ___________________________________ Follow me on Twitter | Run Junkie God put me on this earth to accomplish a certain number of things - right now I am so far behind, I will never die.
__________________ Craig Payne
__________________________________________________ ___________________________________ Follow me on Twitter | Run Junkie God put me on this earth to accomplish a certain number of things - right now I am so far behind, I will never die.
Anecdotally, many still only scan the abstract then straight to the results/discussion. If the method is flawed then what follows is meaningless, no? That 'lateral wedge' intervention trial would be excellent for students (like myself) for methodology, mark
Thanks a million guys, you are right Mark when there is no foundation its hard to see any solid reputable results... Thanks so much for your help Craig.. The paper on lateral wedges displays a vast difference compared to some of the poorer rcts i have read..
Are there any set guidlines that can be followed to differentiate between poorly written RCTs and well written ones.