Comment on Toothbrush heads
iamthetot@piefed.ca 1 week agoDecided to do some reading!
CONSORT guidelines state that these terms should no longer be used because they are ambiguous. For instance, “double-blind” may mean that the data analysts and patients were blinded; the patients and outcome assessors were blinded; or the patients and those administering the intervention were blinded. The terms also fail to convey the information that was masked and the extent of unblinding. It is not sufficient to specify the number of parties that have been blinded. To describe an experiment’s blinding, it is necessary to report who has been blinded to what information, and how well each blind succeeded.
So double blind doesn’t have to mean the researchers or even the participants were blinded, just that two parties were.
In this specific study, I think it’s that the data analysts were not aware of which groups the data came from.
elephantium@lemmy.world 6 days ago
Huh, that doesn’t match my understanding (TBF I don’t work in the field).
Looking again at the study… Dr. Jain had a second person split the students into two groups. I’m not sure whether she conducted the followup exams or had yet another person do that. Assuming that the students were strict about not talking about which toothbrush they were using, I suppose you could call it a ‘blinded’ experiment. I don’t really see how you could double it, though.