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Chapter 8
Internal validity refers to the degree to
which the results of a study
are likely to approximate to the ‘truth’ for the circumstances being
studied
4
. Has the study been conducted in such a way that systematic
error (bias) has been minimised?
External validity
refers to the degree
to which the effects observed in the study are applicable to the outside
world; how generalisable are the results to other circumstances
5
? If
internal
validity does not exist, there is little point in considering a
study’s external validity. There are numerous ways in which bias can
affect the internal validity of a study.
Some of the main biases
6
are
described in Table 8.4.
There is a plethora of critical appraisal checklists and resources
available. Some guidance on the types of questions to ask
7,8
when
reading research articles is presented below:
• What is the research question?
• Is the study design appropriate?
• How well was the study conducted? Consider issues of:
—
Internal
validity
—
Sample size
—
Validity of outcome measures
—
Duration of follow-up
Table 8.3
Example of results obtained
when different free-text terms, MeSH terms,
search operators and truncation symbols are used when searching an electronic
database (
The Cochrane Library, Issue 4, 2003).
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