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    Lancet. 1991 Nov 2;338(8775):1127-30.

    Can meta-analyses be trusted?

    Source

    Medical Statistics Unit, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, UK.

    Abstract

    The enthusiasm for meta-analyses (or overviews) expressed by their proponents is not always shared by the broader medical community. To encourage constructive debate, we adopt a critical perspective on the conduct and interpretation of meta-analysis. We focus particularly on some of the statistical issues, especially heterogeneity between studies, and also on the extrapolation of meta-analysis findings to clinical practice. We conclude that meta-analysis is not an exact statistical science that provides definitive simple answers to complex clinical problems. It is more appropriately viewed as a valuable objective descriptive technique, which often furnishes clear qualitative conclusions about broad treatment policies, but whose quantitative results have to be interpreted cautiously.

    PMID:
    1682553
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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