Article Text
Abstract
Natural experimental studies are often recommended as a way of understanding the health impact of policies and other large scale interventions. Although they have certain advantages over planned experiments, and may be the only option when it is impossible to manipulate exposure to the intervention, natural experimental studies are more susceptible to bias. This paper introduces new guidance from the Medical Research Council to help researchers and users, funders and publishers of research evidence make the best use of natural experimental approaches to evaluating population health interventions. The guidance emphasises that natural experiments can provide convincing evidence of impact even when effects are small or take time to appear. However, a good understanding is needed of the process determining exposure to the intervention, and careful choice and combination of methods, testing of assumptions and transparent reporting is vital. More could be learnt from natural experiments in future as experience of promising but lesser used methods accumulates.
- Public health
- research methods
- epidemiology
- suicide
- death certification
- systematic reviews
- public health policy
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Footnotes
Funding Preparation of this paper was supported by the MRC Population Health Sciences Research Network, and the MRC Methodology Research Panel.
Competing interests None.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.
Data sharing statement Preparation of the paper did not involve the use of primary data.