Blinding Induced Risk of Bias in Randomized Controlled Trials of Physiotherapy Interventions — A Retrospective Study

Introduction: In randomized clinical trials, the methodological idea of preventing bias by withholding knowledge of the allocation status is known as blinding. Blinding refers back to the concealment of group allocation from one or extra individuals concerned in scientific studies, most com...

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Main Authors: Joseph John, Naveen Kumar I
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sri Devaraj Urs Academy of Higher Education and Research 2023-05-01
Series:Journal of Clinical and Biomedical Sciences
Online Access:https://jcbsonline.ac.in/articles/blinding-induced-risk-of-bias-in-randomized-controlled-trials-of-physiotherapy-interventions-a-retrospective-study
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author Joseph John
Naveen Kumar I
author_facet Joseph John
Naveen Kumar I
author_sort Joseph John
collection DOAJ
description Introduction: In randomized clinical trials, the methodological idea of preventing bias by withholding knowledge of the allocation status is known as blinding. Blinding refers back to the concealment of group allocation from one or extra individuals concerned in scientific studies, most commonly a randomized controlled trial (RCT). Even though randomization minimizes variations among treatment groups on the outset of the trial, it does nothing to prevent differential treatment of the groups later within the trial or the differential assessment of outcomes, either of which may also bring about biased estimates of treatment outcomes. The most beneficial strategy to limit the chance of differential remedy or assessments of results is to blind as many individuals as viable in a trial. Objective: To study the extent of blinding induced bias in RCT of physiotherapy interventions and to evaluate the extent of interpretative consideration it the trials are not blinded in the sample of RCT included. Methodology : We conducted a retrospective analysis to estimate the blinding bias in the randomized controlled trials published in physiotherapy interventions from 2016 to 2022. Results & Conclusion : We included 50 RCTs for blinding assessment. About 88% of included articles were not having participants blinding 90% has not done therapist blinding and nearly 50% of studies were conducted without assessors blinding. Based on the results of this study blinding of important participants were infrequently reported in the included studies. Keywords: Blinding, Risk of bias, Physiotherapy, Randomized controlled trials
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spelling doaj-art-cb9308d1d3d44053a6b5280042a966ee2025-08-20T03:40:14ZengSri Devaraj Urs Academy of Higher Education and ResearchJournal of Clinical and Biomedical Sciences2231-41802319-24532023-05-01131293510.58739/jcbs/v13i1.23.2Blinding Induced Risk of Bias in Randomized Controlled Trials of Physiotherapy Interventions — A Retrospective StudyJoseph JohnNaveen Kumar I Introduction: In randomized clinical trials, the methodological idea of preventing bias by withholding knowledge of the allocation status is known as blinding. Blinding refers back to the concealment of group allocation from one or extra individuals concerned in scientific studies, most commonly a randomized controlled trial (RCT). Even though randomization minimizes variations among treatment groups on the outset of the trial, it does nothing to prevent differential treatment of the groups later within the trial or the differential assessment of outcomes, either of which may also bring about biased estimates of treatment outcomes. The most beneficial strategy to limit the chance of differential remedy or assessments of results is to blind as many individuals as viable in a trial. Objective: To study the extent of blinding induced bias in RCT of physiotherapy interventions and to evaluate the extent of interpretative consideration it the trials are not blinded in the sample of RCT included. Methodology : We conducted a retrospective analysis to estimate the blinding bias in the randomized controlled trials published in physiotherapy interventions from 2016 to 2022. Results & Conclusion : We included 50 RCTs for blinding assessment. About 88% of included articles were not having participants blinding 90% has not done therapist blinding and nearly 50% of studies were conducted without assessors blinding. Based on the results of this study blinding of important participants were infrequently reported in the included studies. Keywords: Blinding, Risk of bias, Physiotherapy, Randomized controlled trialshttps://jcbsonline.ac.in/articles/blinding-induced-risk-of-bias-in-randomized-controlled-trials-of-physiotherapy-interventions-a-retrospective-study
spellingShingle Joseph John
Naveen Kumar I
Blinding Induced Risk of Bias in Randomized Controlled Trials of Physiotherapy Interventions — A Retrospective Study
Journal of Clinical and Biomedical Sciences
title Blinding Induced Risk of Bias in Randomized Controlled Trials of Physiotherapy Interventions — A Retrospective Study
title_full Blinding Induced Risk of Bias in Randomized Controlled Trials of Physiotherapy Interventions — A Retrospective Study
title_fullStr Blinding Induced Risk of Bias in Randomized Controlled Trials of Physiotherapy Interventions — A Retrospective Study
title_full_unstemmed Blinding Induced Risk of Bias in Randomized Controlled Trials of Physiotherapy Interventions — A Retrospective Study
title_short Blinding Induced Risk of Bias in Randomized Controlled Trials of Physiotherapy Interventions — A Retrospective Study
title_sort blinding induced risk of bias in randomized controlled trials of physiotherapy interventions a retrospective study
url https://jcbsonline.ac.in/articles/blinding-induced-risk-of-bias-in-randomized-controlled-trials-of-physiotherapy-interventions-a-retrospective-study
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