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Randomised controlled trials in the evaluation of non-biomedical therapeutic interventions for pain: The gold standard?

Randomised controlled trials in the evaluation of non-biomedical therapeutic interventions for pain: The gold standard?
Randomised controlled trials in the evaluation of non-biomedical therapeutic interventions for pain: The gold standard?
This paper offers a critical review of important issues in the implementation and interpretation of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) used to evaluate non-biomedical therapeutic interventions for pain. The analysis of methodological issues focuses on the validity, relevance and clinical importance of outcome measures; sampling and randomization bias; blinding procedures used to control for the placebo response and therapist influences, and treatment standardisation. A key issue is that pain management is inextricably linked to the establishment of a therapeutic relationship. In such circumstances, it is argued that the 'gold standard' double-blind RCT is impracticable. Those relying on RCTs as sources of evidence need to be aware that an 'unblinded' RCT can enhance placebo responses to the intervention and introduce important sources of bias. The challenge faced by healthcare researchers is to identify alternative research designs able to provide valid and reliable evidence that the proposed therapeutic intervention is capable of achieving cost-effective, clinically important and personally relevant outcomes in naturalistic settings.
pain, Pain management, Placebo, Randomised controlled trials, Methodology, Therapeutic relationship
317-329
Walker, J.
991d793e-2b84-403b-a9ee-0a802b90f06d
Sofaer, B.
8d75b373-826e-4829-9e53-e379ad75366b
Walker, J.
991d793e-2b84-403b-a9ee-0a802b90f06d
Sofaer, B.
8d75b373-826e-4829-9e53-e379ad75366b

Walker, J. and Sofaer, B. (2003) Randomised controlled trials in the evaluation of non-biomedical therapeutic interventions for pain: The gold standard? Journal of Research in Nursing, 8 (5), 317-329. (doi:10.1177/136140960300800502).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This paper offers a critical review of important issues in the implementation and interpretation of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) used to evaluate non-biomedical therapeutic interventions for pain. The analysis of methodological issues focuses on the validity, relevance and clinical importance of outcome measures; sampling and randomization bias; blinding procedures used to control for the placebo response and therapist influences, and treatment standardisation. A key issue is that pain management is inextricably linked to the establishment of a therapeutic relationship. In such circumstances, it is argued that the 'gold standard' double-blind RCT is impracticable. Those relying on RCTs as sources of evidence need to be aware that an 'unblinded' RCT can enhance placebo responses to the intervention and introduce important sources of bias. The challenge faced by healthcare researchers is to identify alternative research designs able to provide valid and reliable evidence that the proposed therapeutic intervention is capable of achieving cost-effective, clinically important and personally relevant outcomes in naturalistic settings.

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Published date: 2003
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Keywords: pain, Pain management, Placebo, Randomised controlled trials, Methodology, Therapeutic relationship

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 9392
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/9392
PURE UUID: bb877be7-be9c-4562-9bc0-0ceb746df0ca

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Date deposited: 22 Oct 2004
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 04:55

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Contributors

Author: J. Walker
Author: B. Sofaer

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