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. 2022 Jan 26;19(3):1386. doi: 10.3390/ijerph19031386
Reporting Score
  1. Is the hypothesis/aim/objective of the study clearly described?

0–1
  • 2.

    Are the main outcomes to be measured clearly described in the Introduction or Methods section?

0–1
  • 3.

    Are the characteristics of the patients included in the study clearly described?

0–1
  • 4.

    Are the interventions of interest clearly described?

0–1
  • 5.

    Are the distributions of principal confounders in each group of subjects to be compared clearly described?

0–1
  • 6.

    Are the main findings of the study clearly described?

0–1
  • 7.

    Does the study provide estimates of the random variability in the data for the main outcomes?

0–1
  • 8.

    Have all important adverse events that may be a consequence of the intervention been reported?

0–1
  • 9.

    Have the characteristics of patients lost to follow-up been described?

0–1
  • 10.

    Have actual probability values been reported (e.g., 0.035 rather than <0.05) for the main outcomes except where the probability value is less than 0.001?

0–1
  • External validity

  • 11.

    Were the subjects asked to participate in the study representative of the entire population from which they were recruited?

0–1
  • 12.

    Were those subjects who were prepared to participate representative of the entire population from which they were recruited?

0–1
  • 13.

    Were the staff, places, and facilities where the patients were treated representative of the treatment the majority of patients received?

0–1
  • Internal validity—bias

  • 14.

    Was an attempt made to blind study subjects to the intervention they have received?

0–1
  • 15.

    Was an attempt made to blind those measuring the main outcomes of the intervention?

0–1
  • 16.

    If any of the results of the study were based on “data dredging”, was this made clear?

0–1
  • 17.

    In trials and cohort studies, do the analyses adjust for different lengths of follow-up of patients, or in case-control studies, is the time period between the intervention and outcome the same for cases and controls?

0–1
  • 18.

    Were the statistical tests used to assess the main outcomes appropriate?

0–1
  • 19.

    Was compliance with the intervention/s reliable?

0–1
  • 20.

    Were the main outcome measures used accurate (valid and reliable)?

0–1
  • Internal validity—confounding (selection bias)

  • 21.

    Were the patients in different intervention groups (trials and cohort studies), or were the cases and controls (case-control studies) recruited from the same population?

0–1
  • 22.

    Were study subjects in different intervention groups (trials and cohort studies), or were the cases and controls (case-control studies) recruited over the same period of time?

0–1
  • 23.

    Were study subjects randomised to intervention groups?

0–1
  • 24.

    Was the randomised intervention assignment concealed from both patients and health care staff until recruitment was complete and irrevocable?

0–1
  • 25.

    Was there adequate adjustment for confounding in the analyses from which the main findings were drawn?

0–1
  • 26.

    Were losses of patients to follow-up taken into account?

0–1
  • Study power

  • 27.

    Did the study have sufficient power to detect a clinically important effect where the probability value for a difference being due to change is less than 5%?

0–1
  • Exercise adherence and supervision

  • 28.

    Was exercise adherence reported?

0–1
  • 29.

    Were exercise sessions supervised?

0–1