The Claim

The most frequently used keywords in RCT-related articles published in high-impact journals between 1990 and 2017 were 'clinical trial', 'therapy', and 'risk', reflecting a dominant focus on evaluating interventions and quantifying health outcomes.

Source: Global mapping of randomised trials related articles published in high-impact-factor medical journals: a cross-sectional analysis

What the research says

Supports is higher

Support is ahead, but a single strong opposing study can change this.

Supports
29score
Challenges
0score

These are independent scores, not a percentage. Higher-grade studies count more, so a single strong opposing study can outweigh several weaker ones.

Description
1 study reviewed
In plain English

Analysis of RCT-related articles in high-impact journals from 1990 to 2017 shows that the most common keywords were 'clinical trial', 'therapy', and 'risk', indicating that research in these journals primarily focused on evaluating medical interventions and measuring health risks.

See the scientific wording

The most frequently used keywords in RCT-related articles published in high-impact journals between 1990 and 2017 were 'clinical trial', 'therapy', and 'risk', reflecting a dominant focus on evaluating interventions and quantifying health outcomes.

Why this might work

Scientists prioritize studying treatments and measuring health risks, so they use words like 'clinical trial', 'therapy', and 'risk' to describe their work in published papers.

Hypothetical mechanismbased on 1 study

What the research says

1 study
  1. Study: Global mapping of randomised trials related articles published in high-impact-factor medical journals: a cross-sectional analysis

    The study looked at thousands of medical papers in top journals and found they mostly talked about testing treatments and measuring health risks — which matches the claim that words like 'clinical trial', 'therapy', and 'risk' were the most common.

Score breakdown, mechanism chain, raw evidence, ideal studies needed & 1 supporting studies

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