9. Consecutive, random or convenience series
What to write
Whether participants formed a consecutive, random or convenience series.
Explanation
The included study participants may be either a consecutive series of all patients evaluated for eligibility at the study location and satisfying the inclusion criteria, or a subselection of these. A subselection can be purely random, produced by using a random numbers table, or less random, if patients are only enrolled on specific days or during specific office hours. In that case, included participants may not be considered a representative sample of the targeted population, and the generalisability of the study results may be jeopardised.1,2
In the example, the authors explicitly described a convenience series where participants were enrolled based on their accessibility to the clinical investigator.
Example
‘All subjects were evaluated and screened for study eligibility by the first author (E.N.E.) prior to study entry. This was a convenience sample of children with pharyngitis; the subjects were enrolled when the first author was present in the emergency department’.3
Training
The UK EQUATOR Centre runs training on how to write using reporting guidelines.
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