Litcius/Paper detail

Promoting Learning from Null or Negative Results in Prevention Science Trials

Nick Axford, Vashti Berry, Jenny Lloyd, Tim Hobbs, Katrina Wyatt

2020Prevention Science33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

There can be a tendency for investigators to disregard or explain away null or negative results in prevention science trials. Examples include not publicizing findings, conducting spurious subgroup analyses, or attributing the outcome post hoc to real or perceived weaknesses in trial design or intervention implementation. This is unhelpful for several reasons, not least that it skews the evidence base, contributes to research "waste", undermines respect for science, and stifles creativity in intervention development. In this paper, we identify possible policy and practice responses when interventions have null (ineffective) or negative (harmful) results, and argue that these are influenced by: the intervention itself (e.g., stage of gestation, perceived importance); trial design, conduct, and results (e.g., pattern of null/negative effects, internal and external validity); context (e.g., wider evidence base, state of policy); and individual perspectives and interests (e.g., stake in the intervention). We advance several strategies to promote more informative null or negative effect trials and enable learning from such results, focusing on changes to culture, process, intervention design, trial design, and environment.

Topics & Concepts

Intervention (counseling)Prevention scienceSpurious relationshipHealth psychologyPsychologyContext (archaeology)Null hypothesisPsychological interventionSocial psychologyPublic healthMedicineEconomicsComputer scienceNursingEconometricsBiologyPsychiatryPaleontologyMachine learningHealth Policy Implementation ScienceMeta-analysis and systematic reviewsBehavioral Health and Interventions