Publication | Closed Access
Caution Regarding the Use of Pilot Studies to Guide Power Calculations for Study Proposals
692
Citations
19
References
2006
Year
Study ProposalsCommittees DemandEngineeringResearch EvaluationResearch EthicsProgram EvaluationRandomized Controlled TrialPilot StudiesStatisticsPower AnalysisPilot ExperimentReliabilityMethodological DevelopmentPower CalculationsMeta-analysisHealth PolicyDesignClinical StudiesGuide Power CalculationsOutcomes ResearchResearch DesignClinical EffectivenessExperiment DesignPatient SafetyDrug TrialMedicineClinical Researchers
Clinical researchers often propose (or review committees demand) pilot studies to determine whether a study is worth performing and to guide power calculations. The most likely outcomes are that (1) studies worth performing are aborted and (2) studies that are not aborted are underpowered. There are many excellent reasons for performing pilot studies. The argument herein is not meant to discourage clinical researchers from performing pilot studies (or review committees from requiring them) but simply to caution against their use for the objective of guiding power calculations.
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