Show pageBacklinksCite current pageExport to PDFBack to top This page is read only. You can view the source, but not change it. Ask your administrator if you think this is wrong. ====== Methodological Malpractice ====== Methodological malpractice refers to the use of flawed, inappropriate, or irresponsible research methods in a way that compromises the validity, reliability, or ethical integrity of a study. It goes beyond minor mistakes — it implies serious negligence or willful disregard for proper scientific standards. 🔍 In Context: Examples of methodological malpractice include: Using statistical models (e.g., PSM or DiD) without checking their assumptions. Ignoring confounding variables. Selectively reporting results (cherry-picking). Failing to conduct robustness checks or sensitivity analyses. Drawing causal conclusions from observational data without justification. Misrepresenting the limitations of the study or overstating the implications. 💬 Used in a sentence: "The authors’ failure to validate model assumptions, report confidence intervals, or control for key confounders amounts to methodological malpractice in health economics." methodological_malpractice.txt Last modified: 2025/06/18 15:01by administrador