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- Daniel M Fatovich and Michael Phillips.
- Department of Emergency Medicine, Royal Perth Hospital, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.
- Emerg Med Australas. 2017 Apr 1; 29 (2): 242-244.
AbstractThe foundation of much medical research rests on the statistical significance of the P-value, but we have fallen prey to the seductive certainty of significance. Other scientific disciplines work to a different standard. This may partly explain why medical reversal is an increasing phenomenon, whereby new studies (based on the 0.05 standard) overturn previous significant findings. This has generated a crisis in the rigour of evidence-based medicine, as many people erroneously believe that a P < 0.05 means the treatment effect is clinically important. However, statistics are not facts about the world. Nor should they be based on an arbitrary threshold that arose for historical reasons. This arbitrary threshold encourages an unthinking automatic response that contributes to industry's influence on medical research. Examples from emergency medicine practice illustrate these themes. Study replication needs to be valued as much as discovery. Careful and thoughtful unbiased thinking about the results we do have is undervalued.© 2017 Australasian College for Emergency Medicine and Australasian Society for Emergency Medicine.
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