SelarDorr t1_j7kbdrz wrote
Reply to comment by SaltZookeepergame691 in Analysis showed that 65.6% of women who took extra Vitamin D gave birth naturally. The study analysed results from the MAVIDOS trial which involved 965 women being randomly allocated an extra 1,000 International Units (IU) per day of vitamin D during their pregnancy or a placebo. by Wagamaga
the hypothesis exists when you decide what your secondaries are.
SaltZookeepergame691 t1_j7kcgnv wrote
This is a post hoc analysis. This was NOT a named secondary! It explicitly says so in the paper, and it’s why I explicitly said it was a post hoc analysis…
For your info, from the reg record:
>Primary outcome measure
>Neonatal whole body bone area, bone mineral content and bone mineral density assessed by dual energy x-ray absorptiometry (DXA) within 10 days of birth.
>Secondary outcome measures
>1. Neonatal and childhood anthropometry and body composition (weight, length and skinfold thickness measurements), assessed within 48 hours of birth
>2. Women's attitude to pregnancy vitamin D supplementation (qualitative study; assessed in main study only). Methodology and timepoints of assessment not yet defined as of 03/03/2008
>3. Childhood bone mass at 4 years
SelarDorr t1_j7kd890 wrote
i see, thanks
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