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Effects of Differences Between Peer Reviewers Suggested by Authors and by EditorsReply
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In Reply: We agree with Dr Cummings' analysis that ORs are not a good approximation to RRs when the risk of the outcome is large. The Table shows the original ORs with RRs for the same outcomes. Risk ratios were estimated by conditional Poisson regression with bootstrapped 95% confidence intervals (2000 replications sampling by study).1-2 We also report the RR for the alternative outcome (eg, reject vs accept or revise) because it is not the reciprocal of the original RR. The OR of the alternative outcome is the reciprocal of the OR of the original outcome.
Table appears in full text version.
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Table. Relative Odds and Risk Ratios for Recommendations by Author-Suggested Reviewers Compared With Editor-Suggested Reviewers
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It is important to interpret the effects of matched studies correctly, and in our study, all measures of effect are potentially useful. Risk ratios measure differences between reviewers' recommendations for all papers reviewed. Odds ratios measure differences between reviewers' . . . [Full Text of this Article]
Sara Schroter, PhD
sschroter@bmj.com
Leanne Tite, MSc
BMJ Editorial Office BMA House London, England
Andrew Hutchings, MSc;
Nick Black, MD
Health Services Research Unit London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine London, England
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