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Mixed messages: most spinal pain and osteoarthritis observational research is unclear or misaligned

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posted on 2025-05-09, 20:19 authored by Connor GleadhillConnor Gleadhill, Hopin Lee, Steven J. Kamper, Aidan Cashin, Harrison Hansford, Adrian C. Traeger, Priscilla Viana Da Silva, Erin NolanErin Nolan, Simon DavidsonSimon Davidson, Magdalena WilczynskaMagdalena Wilczynska, Emma Robson, Christopher WilliamsChristopher Williams
Objectives: We assessed authors' language and methods to determine alignment between reported aims, methods, intent, and interpretations in observational studies in spinal pain or osteoarthritis. Study Design and Setting: We searched five databases for observational studies that included people with spinal pain or osteoarthritis published in the last 5 years. We randomized 100 eligible studies, and classified study intent (aims and methods) and interpretations as causal, non-causal, unclear, or misaligned. Results: Overall, 38% of studies were aligned regarding their intent and interpretation (either causally (22%) or non-causally (16%)). 29% of studies' aims and 29% of study methods were unclear. Intent was misaligned in 16% of studies (where aim differed to method) and 23% of studies had misaligned interpretations (where there were multiple conflicting claims). The most common kind of aim was non-causal (38%), and the most common type of method (39%), intent (38%), and interpretations (35%) was causal. Conclusions: Misalignment and mixed messages are common in observational research of spinal pain and osteoarthritis. More than 6 in 10 observational studies may be uninterpretable, because study intent and interpretations do not align. While causal methods and intent are most common in observational research, authors commonly shroud causal intent in non-causal terminology.

History

Journal title

Journal of Clinical Epidemiology

Volume

155

Issue

March 2023

Pagination

39-47

Publisher

Elsevier

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

College of Health, Medicine and Wellbeing

School

School of Medicine and Public Health

Rights statement

© 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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