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Methodological rigor and citation frequency in patient compliance literature

J.T. Bruer

American Journal of Public Health, 1982, vol. 72, issue 10, 1119-1123

Abstract: An exhaustive bibliography which assesses the methodological rigor of the patient compliance literature, and citation data from the Science Citation Index (SCI) are combined to determine if methodologically rigorous papers are used with greater frequency than substandard articles by compliance investigators. There are low, but statistically significant, correlations between methodological rigor and citation indicators for 138 patient compliance papers published in SCI source journals during 1975 and 1976. The correlation is not strong enough to warrant use of citation measures as indicators of rigor on a paper-by-paper basis. The data do suggest that citation measures might be developed as crude indicators of methodological rigor. There is no evidence that randomized trials are cited more frequently than studies that employ other experimental designs.

Date: 1982
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:aph:ajpbhl:1982:72:10:1119-1123_0

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