Title of article :
Observational Studies in Bariatric Surgery
Author/Authors :
Hosseini-Baharanchi, Fatemeh Sadat Minimally Invasive Surgery Research Center - Iran University of Medical Sciences - Tehran, Iran
Abstract :
In medical literature, studies are divided into two categories; experimental and observational settings. Experimental studies, entitled
randomized controlled trials could test the relationship between exposure and outcome experimentally via control group
and random allocation. Observational settings include either analytical or descriptive studies. Descriptive studies consist of case
reports and case series that are helpful in present the experience of a case or a series of cases with similar diagnoses in detail which
results in hypothesis generation. Cross-sectional studies, as analytical designs, are not capable to survey the temporality of exposure
and outcome as simultaneously exposure and outcome status are measured. In case-control studies, subjects follow back from outcome
to exposure. The rare diseases are recommended to study using case-control setting to save expenses and time. Both exposure
measurement and patient selection is before disease detection in cohort studies. Therefore, they are inefficient for rare diseases or
diseases with long latency. Cohort studies are time consuming with high cost and loss to follow-up. This paper elaborately reviews
the features, advantages, and disadvantages of different types of observational and experimental studies.
Keywords :
Experimental Studies , Review , Bariatric Surgery , Cohort Studies , Case-Control Studies , Observational Studies
Journal title :
Astroparticle Physics