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Randomized controlled trial

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Revision as of 21:25, 9 April 2020 by Eptalon (talk | changes)

A randomized controlled trial is a special method of doing a scientific experiment which can reduce certain sources of bias. It is often used in the context of testing whether drugs are effective against a set of symptoms. When doing the test, the participants are randomly put into different groups. Each group is treated differently, and at the end the results are compared. A common case is that one group will receive a placebo drug, while the other will receive the real one. The trial is called blinded, if the participants, and those giving the drugs do not know what group a patient is in.