Quiz Ref IDOur study has limitations
including generalizability of our findings (because it was conducted at 1 hospital), a small sample, and a lack of prior research studies on the topic.
Our study has limitations
including generalizability of our findings (because it was conducted at 1 hospital), a small sample, and a lack of prior research studies on the topic.
Limitations
include generalizability of the findings to clinical populations, ethnic minority families and to families living in suburban and urban setting, and reliance on self - reported measures.
Limitations
include generalizability of the findings to ethnic minority families and to families living in suburban and urban setting, lack of reliable and valid measures, and lack of follow - up.
Not exact matches
Limitations
include reliance on self - reported measures,
generalizability of the
findings is limited by the community sample taking part in an evaluation
of a preventive intervention, and intervention condition families were offered an incentive to participate in the program.
Weaknesses
include the response rate
of 59 %, possibly reducing the
generalizability of our
findings to children
of lower socioeconomic status postcodes, non — English - speaking backgrounds, and lone - parent families (all known to be underrepresented in the LSAC).
Given nonresponse,
generalizability of our
findings to the original cohort is possible to the extent that (1) within levels
of baseline covariates, treatment assignment is independent
of the outcome; (2) within levels
of baseline covariates, missingness
of an outcome is independent
of the outcome; and (3) our regression models are correctly specified.39 While the first and second assumptions can not be empirically validated, we did not have differential attrition
of families, and we believe that we have
included a set
of covariates to increase the plausibility
of these assumptions.
Limitations
include the relatively small sample size, the lack
of Time 1 assessment
of parent ratings
of youth substance use, and the presence
of some attrition over time, which limits the representativeness
of the sample and the
generalizability of the
findings.
Limitations
include that the
generalizability of the
findings are limited to mothers who are concerned enough about their child's behavior to register for a parenting course, small sample size, and limited follow - up.
Limitations
include the nonrandomization
of participants the predominately female participants which limits the
generalizability of findings, and the use
of a single data point.
Limitations
include no significant different in effect between interventions,
generalizability of the
findings to ethnic minority families and to families living in suburban and urban setting, and lack
of reliable and valid measures.
Limitations
include the small sample size and not examining PMTO interventions in diverse cultures which could lend support to the potential
generalizability of the specific
findings of this study.
Limitations
include lack
of reliable and valid measures,
generalizability of the
findings limited because
of the specific substance use and delinquency patterns, rural residence, predominantly White composition
of the sample.
Limitations
include control group parents were not offered an intervention on a waitlist basis, reliability
of self - report measures, and
generalizability of findings due to youth coming from predominantly white, middle - to - higher income two - parent families.
Limitations
include no significant different in effect between PDFY and ISFP,
generalizability of the
findings to ethnic minority families and to families living in suburban and urban setting, and lack
of reliable and valid measures.