29. Protocol
What to write
Where the full study protocol can be accessed.
Explanation
Full study protocols typically contain additional methodological information that is not provided in the final study report, because of word limits, or because it has been reported elsewhere. This additional information can be helpful for those who want to thoroughly appraise the validity of the study, for researchers who want to replicate the study and for practitioners who want to implement the testing procedures.
An increasing number of researchers share their original study protocol, often before enrolment of the first participant in the study. They may do so by publishing the protocol in a scientific journal, at an institutional or sponsor website, or as supplementary material on the journal website, to accompany the study report.
If the protocol has been published or posted online, authors should provide a reference or a link. If the study protocol has not been published, authors should state from whom it can be obtained.1
In the example, the authors provided a reference to the full protocol, which had been published previously.
Example
‘The design and rationale of the OPTIMAP study have been previously published in more detail [with reference to study protocol]’.2
Training
The UK EQUATOR Centre runs training on how to write using reporting guidelines.
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