Testad 2010.
Study characteristics | ||
Methods |
Study design: cluster‐randomised controlled trial (not registered, no study protocol published) Intervention period: 6 months Duration of follow‐up: 12 months (follow‐up data were assessed 6 months after the intervention period) Study period: 2003 to 2004 |
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Participants |
Country: Norway Setting: four nursing homes, region Rogaland; all seven nursing homes in the region were invited and four agreed to participate (two small facilities (17 and 21 residents) and two larger facilities (81 and 92 residents)). Participants/clusters:
Baseline characteristics:
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Interventions |
Intervention: educational intervention plus guidance Control: usual care |
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Outcomes |
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Notes |
Funding: Norwegian Research Council Cluster effect was not incorporated in the analysis (risk of unit‐of‐analysis error). |
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Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Unclear risk | "(...) we randomly assigned subjects on home level. One small and one larger home were randomly allocated to either intervention or control condition (...)." No further information reported or given by the study authors on request. There were statistically significant differences between the study groups at baseline (proportion of participants with physical restraints, challenging behaviour, proportion of participants with antipsychotics). However, these differences may have been occurred by chance, since the number of clusters per group was small. |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Unclear risk | Not reported |
Blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias) All outcomes | Low risk | Blinding of personnel was not possible due to the nature of the study. Clusters were allocated to the study groups and there was no evidence for an increased risk of contamination of clusters in the control group. No information about blinding of the participants was reported, but the intervention was delivered to the nursing staff. We judged the risk for a performance bias to be low. |
Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias) All outcomes | Low risk | "(...) rater‐blinded randomised‐controlled trial (...)"; "(...) blinded assessment procedure (...)". |
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) All outcomes | Unclear risk | Attrition rates were comparable between the study groups, but the attrition rate was approximately 43%. Reasons for attrition were reported. |
Selective reporting (reporting bias) | Unclear risk | Not registered; no published study protocol available. We had insufficient information to permit judgement of ‘low risk’ or ‘high risk'. |