Sarrell 2003b.
Methods | Computer‐numbered randomisation Baseline comparability documented Ear drops in identical bottles Double‐blind Not ITT (5 of 90 patients were excluded) | |
Participants | Israel 85 children in an ambulatory clinic aged 5 to 18 years with ear pain caused by AOM | |
Interventions | Treatment: anaesthetic ear drops (amethocaine, phenazone, glycerine). Control: naturopathic ear drops (Allium sativum, Verbascum thapsus, calendula flores, Hypericum perforatum, Lavandula officinalis and vitamin E in olive oil) Drops were instilled 3 times daily for 3 days All children were also given oral amoxicillin (80 mg/kg/day divided into 3 doses) Duration: 3 days | |
Outcomes | Ear pain was assessed using 2 visual analogue scales and an overall ear pain score was determined. The first data point was assessed at the diagnosis of AOM and then pain was assessed during 3 days; before the drops were installed, and at 15 and 30 minutes after instillation Outcome: mean pain score | |
Notes | ||
Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Low risk | "...the children were assigned by computer‐numbered randomization..." |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Unclear risk | No mention of sequentially numbered, opaque, sealed envelopes or of central randomisation by a third party |
Blinding (performance bias and detection bias) All outcomes | Low risk | "A double‐blind design was used, and all ear drops were placed in identical bottles" "The contents of the bottles were unknown by both the subjects and the nurse" |
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) All outcomes | Unclear risk | "Nine of the 180 children enrolled in the study (1 in group A, 3 in group B, 3 in group C, and 2 in group D) were excluded from the final analysis because of noncompliance: 5 forgot to take the medicine, and 4 could not be reached for the follow‐up interview." |
AOM: acute otitis media ITT: intention‐to‐treat