Bandingkan metode
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| Uji Coba Terkendali Acak Pragmatis× | Uji Coba Terkendali Acak Kelompok× | |
|---|---|---|
| Bidang | Desain Eksperimen | Desain Eksperimen |
| Keluarga | Process / pipeline | Process / pipeline |
| Tahun asal≠ | 1967 | 1978–1980s |
| Pencetus≠ | Daniel Schwartz and Joseph Lellouch | Cornfield (1978); systematised by Donner and colleagues (1980s) |
| Tipe≠ | Experimental design — pragmatic trial | Experimental design |
| Sumber perintis≠ | Schwartz, D., & Lellouch, J. (1967). Explanatory and pragmatic attitudes in therapeutical trials. Journal of Chronic Diseases, 20(8), 637–648. DOI ↗ | Donner, A., & Klar, N. (2000). Design and Analysis of Cluster Randomization Trials in Health Research. Arnold. ISBN: 978-0340652978 |
| Alias | pRCT, pragmatic trial, practical clinical trial, real-world RCT | cluster RCT, group-randomized trial, community randomized trial, cluster-randomized experiment |
| Terkait | 4 | 4 |
| Ringkasan≠ | A pragmatic randomized controlled trial (pRCT) tests whether an intervention works under ordinary, real-world conditions — broad eligibility, flexible delivery, and routine care settings. Participants are still randomly assigned to treatment or control, preserving causal inference, but the study is designed to reflect the diversity and variability of actual practice rather than the ideal conditions of an explanatory trial. The defining framework is the PRECIS-2 tool, which maps any RCT along nine pragmatic-to-explanatory dimensions. | A cluster randomized controlled trial (cluster RCT) is an experimental design in which intact social or organisational groups — such as schools, clinics, villages, or workplaces — are randomly assigned to treatment conditions rather than individual participants. Outcomes are still measured at the individual level, but the unit of randomization is the cluster. This design is essential when an intervention is delivered to whole groups, when there is a risk of contamination between participants in the same setting, or when individual randomization is logistically or ethically impractical. |
| ScholarGateSet data ↗ |
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