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The Intervention Selection Bias: An Underrecognized Confound in Intervention Research.
141
Citations
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References
2004
Year
CounselingFamily MedicineEvidence-based InterventionTreatment EffectEducationQuasi-experimentCausal InferencePsychologyProgram EvaluationIntervention ScienceImplementation SciencePublic HealthInternal ValidityBehavioral SciencesSelection BiasHealth PolicyHealth PromotionChild AbuseIntervention MechanismApplied Social PsychologyResponse To InterventionIntervention StrategiesBehavioral SupportJuvenile DelinquencyPrevention ScienceIntervention Selection Bias
Selection bias can be the most important threat to internal validity in intervention research, but is often insufficiently recognized and controlled. The bias is illustrated in research on parental interventions (punishment, homework assistance); medical interventions (hospitalization); and psychological interventions for suicide risk, sex offending, and juvenile delinquency. The intervention selection bias is most adequately controlled in randomized studies or strong quasi-experimental designs, although recent statistical innovations can enhance weaker designs. The most important points are to increase awareness of the intervention selection bias and to systematically evaluate plausible alternative explanations of data before making causal conclusions.
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