23 research outputs found
"Include me if you can"-reasons for low enrollment of pediatric patients in a psychopharmacological trial
BACKGROUND: Low recruitment in clinical trials is a common and costly problem which undermines medical research. This study aimed to investigate the challenges faced in recruiting children and adolescents with obsessive-compulsive disorder and autism spectrum disorder for a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial and to analyze reasons for non-participation. The trial was part of the EU FP7 project TACTICS (Translational Adolescent and Childhood Therapeutic Interventions in Compulsive Syndromes). METHODS: Demographic data on pre-screening patients were collected systematically, including documented reasons for non-participation. Findings were grouped according to content, and descriptive statistical analyses of the data were performed. RESULTS: In total, n = 173 patients were pre-screened for potential participation in the clinical trial. Of these, only five (2.9%) were eventually enrolled. The main reasons for non-inclusion were as follows: failure to meet all inclusion criteria/meeting one or more of the exclusion criteria (n = 73; 42.2%), no interest in the trial or trials in general (n = 40; 23.1%), and not wanting changes to current therapy/medication (n = 14; 8.1%). CONCLUSIONS: The findings from this study add valuable information to the existing knowledge on reasons for low clinical trial recruitment rates in pediatric psychiatric populations. Low enrollment and high exclusion rates raise the question of whether such selective study populations are representative of clinical patient cohorts. Consequently, the generalizability of the results of such trials may be limited. The present findings will be useful in the development of improved recruitment strategies and may guide future research in establishing the measurement of representativeness to ensure enhanced external validity in psychopharmacological clinical trials in pediatric populations. TRIAL REGISTRATION: EudraCT 2014-003080-38 . Registered on 14 July 2014
Differential 3-year effects of first- versus second-generation antipsychotics on subjective well-being in schizophrenia using marginal structural models
This study examined the differential effects of first- (FGAs) versus second-generation antipsychotics (SGAs) on subjective well-being in patients with schizophrenia
The Feldstein–Horioka puzzle in South Africa: A fractional cointegration approach
The Feldstein–Horioka (FH) puzzle, that is the strong correlation between saving and
investment in a world where obstacles to capital mobility are limited, has been studied
extensively since it was exposed in 1980. Even though the theoretical and empirical literature
has examined many of its potential causes, the puzzle persists. This paper aims
at shedding further light on the issue by investigating the relationship between saving
and investment in South Africa since 1946 using fractional integration and cointegration
techniques to account for high persistence in the series. We find evidence of fractional
cointegration between saving and investment, indicating some degree of persistence in
the gap between the two variables.We also find a structural break in saving and investment
ratios to GDP around 1980, which roughly coincides with the start of a financial
deregulation process in South Africa. While fractional cointegration holds before the
break, it does not thereafter. In other words, while the FH puzzle is observed before the
start of financial deregulation, it subsequently disappears. This suggests that financial
deregulation may have loosened the link between saving and investment.http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/rjte202017-09-30hb2016Economic