Study population
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Dealing with participation bias
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• Keep non-response or loss to follow-up to a minimum
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• Responders and non-responders
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• Characterize non-responders or those lost to follow-up
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• articipants and non-participants
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• Control for extent and direction of bias in final data analysis
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• Different types of participants
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• Participants lost to follow-up for the clinical assessment Finding an adequately sized and well-matched control group
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• In case the number of controls is insufficient: incorporate other types of control subjects
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• Choose types of controls that are representative of the study population
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• Characterize and control for differences between survivors and controls
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• Compare self-reported data with an more objective source, such as medical records or registries
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Data collection
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Validating instruments for data collection
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• Conduct reliability studies to account for inter- and intra- observer variation
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• If possible, use data collection instruments that allow for one investigator to analyse collected data (observer bias) |