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      Analysis of data from group-randomized trials with repeat observations on the same groups.

      Statistics in Medicine
      Analysis of Variance, Bias (Epidemiology), Computer Simulation, Data Collection, statistics & numerical data, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Humans, Monte Carlo Method, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic

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          Abstract

          This study used Monte Carlo simulations to evaluate the performance of alternative models for the analysis of group-randomized trials having more than two time intervals for data collection. The major distinction among the models tested was the sampling variance of the intervention effect. In the mixed-model ANOVA, the sampling variance of the intervention effect is based on the variance among group x time-interval means. In the random coefficients model, the sampling variance of the intervention effect is based on the variance among the group-specific slopes. These models are equivalent when the design includes only two time intervals, but not when there are more than two time intervals. The results indicate that the mixed-model ANOVA yields unbiased estimates of sampling variation and nominal type I error rates when the group-specific time trends are homogenous. However, when the group-specific time trends are heterogeneous, the mixed-model ANOVA yields downwardly biased estimates of sampling variance and inflated type I error rates. In contrast, the random coefficients model yields unbiased estimates of sampling variance and the nominal type I error rate regardless of the pattern among the groups. We discuss implications for the analysis of group-randomized trials with more than two time intervals.

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          Journal
          9699231
          10.1002/(SICI)1097-0258(19980730)17:14<1581::AID-SIM864>3.0.CO;2-N

          Chemistry
          Analysis of Variance,Bias (Epidemiology),Computer Simulation,Data Collection,statistics & numerical data,Data Interpretation, Statistical,Humans,Monte Carlo Method,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic

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