skip to content
National Cancer Institute U.S. National Institutes of Health www.cancer.gov
Pubications

Publications Search

Abstract

Title: Interplay between design and analysis for behavioral intervention trials with community as the unit of randomization.
Author: Green SB, Corle DK, Gail MH, Mark SD, Pee D, Freedman LS, Graubard BI, Lynn WR
Journal: Am J Epidemiol 142(6):587-593
Year: 1995
Month: September

Abstract: This paper outlines an approach for the design and analysis of randomized controlled trials investigating community-based interventions for behavioral change aimed at health promotion. The approach is illustrated using the Community Intervention Trial for Smoking Cessation (COMMIT), conducted from 1988 to 1993, involving 11 pairs of communities in North America, matched on geographic location, size, and sociodemographic factors. The situation discussed is when assignment to intervention is done at the community level; for COMMIT, the very nature of the intervention required this. The number of communities as a key determinant of the statistical power of the trial. The use of matched pairs of communities can achieve a gain in statistical efficiency. Randomization is used to obtain an unbiased assessment of the intervention effect; randomization also provides the basis for statistical analysis. Permutation tests (and corresponding test-based confidence intervals), using community as the unit of analysis, follow directly from the randomization distribution. Within this framework, individual-level covariates can be used for imputation of missing values and for adjusting analyses of intervention effect.