Carl V Phillips

Summary

Publications

  1. ncbi Publication bias in situ
    Carl V Phillips
    Center for Philosophy, Health, and Policy Sciences, Inc, Houston, USA
    BMC Med Res Methodol 4:20. 2004
  2. ncbi You might as well smoke; the misleading and harmful public message about smokeless tobacco
    Carl V Phillips
    University of Texas Medical School, Center for Clinical Research and Evidence Based Medicine, Houston, USA
    BMC Public Health 5:31. 2005
  3. ncbi Quantifying errors without random sampling
    Carl V Phillips
    Management and Policy Sciences, University of Texas School of Public Health and Center for Clinical Research and Evidence Based Medicine, University of Texas Medical School, Houston, Texas, USA
    BMC Med Res Methodol 3:9. 2003
  4. ncbi Letter to the editor in response to "An epidemic that deserves more attention: epidemiology, prevention, and treatment of smokeless tobacco"
    Carl V Phillips
    South Med J 101:211; author reply 211-2. 2008

Detail Information

Publications4

  1. ncbi Publication bias in situ
    Carl V Phillips
    Center for Philosophy, Health, and Policy Sciences, Inc, Houston, USA
    BMC Med Res Methodol 4:20. 2004
    ..quot; But choices about how to analyze the data and which results to report create a publication bias within the published results, a bias I label "publication bias in situ" (PBIS)...
  2. ncbi You might as well smoke; the misleading and harmful public message about smokeless tobacco
    Carl V Phillips
    University of Texas Medical School, Center for Clinical Research and Evidence Based Medicine, Houston, USA
    BMC Public Health 5:31. 2005
    ..But consumers and policy makers have little chance of learning that ST is much less dangerous than smoking because popular information provided by experts and advocates overstates the health risks from ST relative to cigarettes...
  3. ncbi Quantifying errors without random sampling
    Carl V Phillips
    Management and Policy Sciences, University of Texas School of Public Health and Center for Clinical Research and Evidence Based Medicine, University of Texas Medical School, Houston, Texas, USA
    BMC Med Res Methodol 3:9. 2003
    ..When a quantification does not involve sampling, error is almost never quantified and results are often reported in ways that dramatically overstate their precision...
  4. ncbi Letter to the editor in response to "An epidemic that deserves more attention: epidemiology, prevention, and treatment of smokeless tobacco"
    Carl V Phillips
    South Med J 101:211; author reply 211-2. 2008