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Original Articles

Single-subject designs as a tool for evidence-based clinical practice: Are they unrecognised and undervalued?

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Pages 904-927 | Published online: 29 Oct 2009
 

Abstract

One could be forgiven for thinking that the only road to evidence-based clinical practice is the application of results from randomised controlled trials (or systematic reviews of such). By contrast, single-subject designs in the context of evidence-based clinical practice are believed by many to be strange bedfellows. In this paper, we argue that single-subject designs play an important role in evidence-based clinical practice. We survey the contents of Neuropsychological Rehabilitation in relation to single-subject designs and tackle the main criticisms that have been levelled against them. We offer practical guidance for rating the methodological quality of single-subject designs and applying statistical techniques to measure treatment efficacy. These guides are equally applicable to research studies and everyday clinical practice with individual patients.

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Corrigendum

The authors thank Anneli Cassell for research assistance in preparing the paper.

Notes

1A lag-2 coefficient reflects the correlation between an observation and the second subsequent observation, lag-3 between an observation and the third subsequent observation, and so forth.

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