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Target Article

The Use of Deception in Public Health Behavioral Intervention Trials: A Case Study of Three Online Alcohol Trials

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Pages 39-47 | Published online: 25 Oct 2013

Keep up to date with the latest research on this topic with citation updates for this article.

Read on this site (9)

Tony Long, Andrew Rowland, Sarah Cotterill, Steve Woby, Calvin Heal, Natalie Garratt, Steve Brown & Damian Roland. (2022) Opt-out Consent in Children’s Emergency Medicine Research. Comprehensive Child and Adolescent Nursing 45:1, pages 31-42.
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Adélaïde Doussau & Christine Grady. (2016) The Ethics of Studying Financial Incentives in Public Health Implementation: Study Design Challenges. The American Journal of Bioethics 16:10, pages 78-80.
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JennyY. Wang & ElizabethA. Kitsis. (2013) Tangling the Web: Deception in Online Research. The American Journal of Bioethics 13:11, pages 59-61.
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Rachel Zuraw. (2013) Consenting in the Dark: Choose Your Own Deception. The American Journal of Bioethics 13:11, pages 57-59.
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Collin O’Neil. (2013) Methodological and Inducement Manipulation. The American Journal of Bioethics 13:11, pages 55-57.
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AndrewD. Plunk & RichardA. Grucza. (2013) Public Health Research, Deception, and Distrust. The American Journal of Bioethics 13:11, pages 54-55.
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ChristianS. Hendershot, JohnA. Cunningham & WilliamH. George. (2013) Deception in Human Experimental and Public Health Research on Alcohol Problems. The American Journal of Bioethics 13:11, pages 48-50.
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AbrahamP. Schwab. (2013) Deception by Omission. The American Journal of Bioethics 13:11, pages 52-53.
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Katarina Ulfsdotter Gunnarsson, Jim McCambridge & Marcus Bendtsen. (2023) Reactions to being allocated to a waiting list control group in a digital alcohol intervention trial. Patient Education and Counseling 107, pages 107572.
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Marcus Bendtsen, Katarina Åsberg & Jim McCambridge. (2022) Effectiveness of a digital intervention versus alcohol information for online help-seekers in Sweden: a randomised controlled trial. BMC Medicine 20:1.
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David Tappin, Daniel Mackay, Lucy Reynolds & Niamh Fitzgerald. (2022) Minimizing sample bias due to stigmatized behaviours: the representativeness of participants in a cohort study of alcohol in pregnancy. BMC Medical Research Methodology 22:1.
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David Wendler. (2022) Deceiving Research Participants: Is It Inconsistent With Valid Consent?. The Journal of Medicine and Philosophy: A Forum for Bioethics and Philosophy of Medicine 47:4, pages 558-571.
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David P French, Lisa M Miles, Diana Elbourne, Andrew Farmer, Martin Gulliford, Louise Locock, Stephen Sutton & Jim McCambridge. (2021) Reducing bias in trials from reactions to measurement: the MERIT study including developmental work and expert workshop. Health Technology Assessment 25:55, pages 1-72.
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Marcus Bendtsen & Jim McCambridge. (2021) Causal models accounted for research participation effects when estimating effects in a behavioral intervention trial. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 136, pages 77-83.
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David Wendler. (2020) The Permissibility of Deception in Riskier Research. Ethics & Human Research 42:2, pages 34-40.
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Alison E. TurnbullMargaret M. HayesRoy G. BrowerElizabeth ColantuoniPragyashree Sharma BasyalDouglas B. WhiteJ. Randall CurtisDale M. Needham. (2019) Effect of Documenting Prognosis on the Information Provided to ICU Proxies: A Randomized Trial*. Critical Care Medicine 47:6, pages 757-764.
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Marcus Bendtsen & Jim McCambridge. (2019) Reducing Alcohol Consumption Among Risky Drinkers in the General Population of Sweden Using an Interactive Mobile Health Intervention: Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial. JMIR Research Protocols 8:4, pages e13119.
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Jim McCambridge, Amanda Wilson, John Attia, Natasha Weaver & Kypros Kypri. (2019) Randomized trial seeking to induce the Hawthorne effect found no evidence for any effect on self-reported alcohol consumption online. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 108, pages 102-109.
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Dawn M. Aycock, Matthew J. Hayat, Ashley Helvig, Sandra B. Dunbar & Patricia C. Clark. (2018) Essential considerations in developing attention control groups in behavioral research. Research in Nursing & Health 41:3, pages 320-328.
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Martine Stead, Tessa Parkes, Avril Nicoll, Sarah Wilson, Cheryl Burgess, Douglas Eadie, Niamh Fitzgerald, Jennifer McKell, Garth Reid, Ruth Jepson, John McAteer & Linda Bauld. (2017) Delivery of alcohol brief interventions in community-based youth work settings: exploring feasibility and acceptability in a qualitative study. BMC Public Health 17:1.
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Kypros Kypri, Amanda Wilson, John Attia, Paschal J Sheeran & Jim McCambridge. (2015) Effects of study design and allocation on self-reported alcohol consumption: randomized trial. Trials 16:1.
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Preben Bendtsen, Marcus Bendtsen, Nadine Karlsson, Ian R White & Jim McCambridge. (2015) Online Alcohol Assessment and Feedback for Hazardous and Harmful Drinkers: Findings From the AMADEUS-2 Randomized Controlled Trial of Routine Practice in Swedish Universities. Journal of Medical Internet Research 17:7, pages e170.
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Elizabeth Yuko & Celia B. Fisher. 2015. International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences. International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences 514 522 .
Jim McCambridge, Kypros Kypri & Diana Elbourne. (2014) In randomization we trust? There are overlooked problems in experimenting with people in behavioral intervention trials. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 67:3, pages 247-253.
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Jim McCambridge, Marcus Bendtsen, Nadine Karlsson, Ian R White & Preben Bendtsen. (2013) Alcohol assessment & feedback by e-mail for university student hazardous and harmful drinkers: study protocol for the AMADEUS-2 randomised controlled trial. BMC Public Health 13:1.
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