Getting carried away: a note showing baseline observation carried forward (BOCF) results can be calculated from published complete-cases results

International Journal of Obesity, 2012 - nature.com
Objective: Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in obesity are plagued by missing data due
to participant dropouts. Most methodologists and regulatory bodies agree that the primary …

Getting carried away: a note showing baseline observation carried forward (BOCF) results can be calculated from published complete-cases results.

KA Kaiser, O Affuso, TM Beasley, DB Allison - 2012 - cabidigitallibrary.org
Abstract Objective: Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in obesity are plagued by missing
data due to participant dropouts. Most methodologists and regulatory bodies agree that the …

Getting carried away: a note showing baseline observation carried forward (BOCF) results can be calculated from published complete-cases results.

KA Kaiser, O Affuso, TM Beasley… - International Journal of …, 2011 - europepmc.org
Objective Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in obesity are plagued by missing data due
to participant dropouts. Most methodologists and regulatory bodies agree that the primary …

Getting carried away: a note showing baseline observation carried forward (BOCF) results can be calculated from published complete-cases results.

KA Kaiser, O Affuso, TM Beasley… - International Journal of …, 2012 - search.ebscohost.com
Abstract Objective: Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in obesity are plagued by missing
data due to participant dropouts. Most methodologists and regulatory bodies agree that the …

Getting carried away: a note showing baseline observation carried forward (BOCF) results can be calculated from published complete-cases results

KA Kaiser, O Affuso, TM Beasley… - … journal of obesity …, 2012 - pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Objective Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in obesity are plagued by missing data due
to participant dropouts. Most methodologists and regulatory bodies agree that the primary …

[引用][C] Getting carried away: a note showing baseline observation carried forward (BOCF) results can be calculated from published complete-cases results

KA KAISER, O AFFUSO, TM BEASLEY… - … journal of obesity, 2012 - pascal-francis.inist.fr
Getting carried away: a note showing baseline observation carried forward (BOCF) results
can be calculated from published complete-cases results CNRS Inist Pascal-Francis CNRS …

[PDF][PDF] Getting Carried Away: A Note Showing Baseline Observation Carried Forward (BOCF) Results Can be Calculated from Published Complete-Cases Results

KA Kaiser, O Affuso, TM Beasley, DB Allison - Int J Obes (Lond), 2012 - academia.edu
Abstract Objective—Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in obesity are plagued by missing
data due to participant drop-outs. Most methodologists and regulatory bodies agree that the …

[HTML][HTML] Getting Carried Away: A Note Showing Baseline Observation Carried Forward (BOCF) Results Can be Calculated from Published Complete-Cases Results

KA Kaiser, O Affuso, TM Beasley… - International Journal of …, 2012 - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Objective Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in obesity are plagued by missing data due
to participant drop-outs. Most methodologists and regulatory bodies agree that the primary …

Getting carried away: a note showing baseline observation carried forward (BOCF) results can be calculated from published complete-cases results

KA Kaiser, O Affuso, TM Beasley… - International Journal of …, 2012 - go.gale.com
Objective: Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in obesity are plagued by missing data due
to participant dropouts. Most methodologists and regulatory bodies agree that the primary …

[PDF][PDF] Getting Carried Away: A Note Showing Baseline Observation Carried Forward (BOCF) Results Can be Calculated from Published Complete-Cases Results

KA Kaiser, O Affuso, TM Beasley, DB Allison - Int J Obes (Lond), 2012 - researchgate.net
Abstract Objective—Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in obesity are plagued by missing
data due to participant drop-outs. Most methodologists and regulatory bodies agree that the …