scispace - formally typeset
D

David A. Grimes

Researcher at FHI 360

Publications -  83
Citations -  11695

David A. Grimes is an academic researcher from FHI 360. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Abortion. The author has an hindex of 41, co-authored 83 publications receiving 10823 citations. Previous affiliations of David A. Grimes include University of Southern California & University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Bias and causal associations in observational research

TL;DR: Readers of medical literature need to consider two types of validity, internal and external: external validity is the ability to generalise from the study to the reader's patients, and internal validity means that the study measured what it set out to.
Journal ArticleDOI

Blinding in randomised trials: hiding who got what.

TL;DR: Although double blinding (blinding investigators, participants, and outcome assessors) indicates a strong design, trials that are not double blinded should not automatically be deemed inferior, and researchers should explicitly state who was blinded, and how.
Journal ArticleDOI

Allocation concealment in randomised trials: defending against deciphering.

TL;DR: Investigators must effectively immunise trials against selection and confounding biases with proper allocation concealment, andHypothesis tests of baseline characteristics, however, are superfluous and could be harmful if they lead investigators to suppress reporting any baseline imbalances.
Journal ArticleDOI

Refining clinical diagnosis with likelihood ratios

TL;DR: When combined with an accurate clinical diagnosis, likelihood ratios from ancillary tests improve diagnostic accuracy in a synergistic manner.
Journal ArticleDOI

Generation of allocation sequences in randomised trials: chance, not choice

TL;DR: The randomised controlled trial sets the gold standard of clinical research, but randomisation persists as perhaps the least-understood aspect of a trial because anything short of proper randomisation courts selection and confounding biases.