Cognitive interviewing (CI) or cognitive debriefing (CD) is now recognised as a significant part in the developmental process of clinical outcome assessment (COA) measures and the assessment of their linguistic validity and cross-cultural equivalence. Despite this, studies reporting the application… Read More ›
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Are we still putting lipstick on the pig or do we need a rethink on interpreting patient reported outcome data?
Look at any paper or presentation reporting the development or use of a patient reported outcome (PRO) measure and without doubt there will be an array of statistical significance levels, standard deviations, standard errors and correlation coefficients in an attempt… Read More ›
Relaunch of dhpresearch
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Selecting the right patient reported outcome (PRO) measure – A case study
Source: Selecting the right patient reported outcome (PRO) measure – A case study
Selecting the right patient reported outcome (PRO) measure – A case study
The challenges A key hurdle facing outcome teams as with the entire pharmaceutical industry is non-adherence by patients to medication. This problem is only likely to be surmounted if patients believe that taking medication will lead to immediate benefits through… Read More ›
3 Ways to improve your survey invite and increase response rates
You’ve designed your survey questionnaire using SurveyMonkey or some other platform and are ready to send it out. But, did you know that your survey email invite can make all the difference to the final response rate to your survey?… Read More ›
6 TIPS FOR DESIGNING AND PRESENTING AN AWESOME PRESENTATION
1 Present your findings as a story Avoid the building block approach of presenting evidence i.e. “this is what we found from the literature…” “This was our methodology…” “These are the findings…” “These are our recommendations. To engage your audience and… Read More ›
YOU NEED TO FOLLOW THIS CHECKLIST FOR A WELL DESIGNED SURVEY QUESTIONNAIRE
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2015 in review
The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2015 annual report for this blog. Here’s an excerpt: A New York City subway train holds 1,200 people. This blog was viewed about 7,000 times in 2015. If it were a NYC subway… Read More ›