Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence

We need to report uncertain results and do it clearly The title of this editorial is not new. For example, it was used nearly a decade ago for an article in the BMJ 's Statistics Notes series.1 Altman and Bland considered the dangers of misinterpreting differences that do not reach significance, criticising use of the term “negative” to describe studies that had not found statistically significant differences. Such studies may not have been large enough to exclude important differences. To leave the impression that they have proved that no effect or no difference exists is misleading. As an example, a randomised trial of behavioural and specific sexually transmitted infection interventions for reducing transmission of HIV-1 was published in the Lancet. 2 The incidence rate ratios for the outcome of HIV-1 infection were 0.94 (95% confidence interval 0.60 to 1.45) and 1.00 (0.63 to 1.58) for two intervention groups compared with control. In …

[1]  R. Say Shared Decision Making. Patient Involvement in Clinical Practice , 2002 .

[2]  Richard Smith,et al.  Britain's gift: a “Medline” of synthesised evidence , 2001, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[3]  I. Russell,et al.  Can randomised trials rely on existing electronic data? A feasibility study to explore the value of routine data in health technology assessment. , 2003, Health technology assessment.

[4]  I. Chalmers It's official: Evaluative research must become part of routine care in the NHS , 2000, Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine.

[5]  R. Ashcroft Giving medicine a fair trial , 2000, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[6]  R Gillon,et al.  The function of criticism. , 1981, British medical journal.

[7]  A. Coates,et al.  Redressing the balance--the ethics of not entering an eligible patient on a randomised clinical trial. , 1992, Annals of oncology : official journal of the European Society for Medical Oncology.

[8]  J. Kleijnen,et al.  Influence of context effects on health outcomes: a systematic review , 2001, The Lancet.

[9]  Geoffrey C Kabat,et al.  Environmental tobacco smoke and tobacco related mortality in a prospective study of Californians, 1960-98 , 2003, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[10]  P. Alderson,et al.  Should journals publish systematic reviews that find no evidence to guide practice? Examples from injury research , 2000, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[11]  A. Feenberg ON BEING A HUMAN SUBJECT: INTEREST AND OBLIGATION IN THE EXPERIMENTAL TREATMENT OF INCURABLE DISEASE , 1992 .

[12]  Raj Ram Gopal,et al.  Syndromic management of sexually-transmitted infections and behaviour change interventions on transmission of HIV-1 in rural Uganda: a community randomised trial , 2003, The Lancet.

[13]  A R Feinstein,et al.  Claims of Equivalence in Medical Research: Are They Supported by the Evidence? , 2000, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[14]  Jane Ogden,et al.  Doctors expressions of uncertainty and patient confidence. , 2002, Patient education and counseling.