I can see you are upset, but my statements hold true.... and I will demonstrate that now below.
Upset? Incredulous more like it. Incredulous that someone with no relevant knowledge or training can come onto a pubic forum and confidently present incorrect material that they do not understand as "holding true"; and in the process risk creating misperceptions among divers who come here to obtain knowledge.
Your statements do
not hold true, and you have demonstrated nothing except your own ignorance of the language and methodology of science. You have cherry-picked and cited stopping criteria that the study did not meet, and ignored the stopping criterion that the study did meet as Joseph has correctly pointed out to you.
Which part of this do you not understand?
The trial was also to be concluded if a midpoint analysis after completion of approximately 188 man-dives on each dive profile found a significantly greater incidence of DCS (Fisher Exact test, one-sided α = 0.05) for the deep stops dive profile than for the shallow stops dive profile.
This is
exactly what happened.
The allowable limits of this test, were 3% to 7% pDCS.
and
Also shown, the A1 profile had a very low return, and is in danger of falling out the bottom of the limits. It is way outside its predicted range, and It was headed towards rejection.
You do not understand these limits.
The 3% limit was to prevent futility. That is, if
both profiles fell below 3% then the trial was not powered (big enough) to show a difference between profiles with such a low incidence of DCS. As David said when he corrected you on RBW:
"We had stopping rules if both schedules had unexpectedly high or low risk, which were likely to result in severe DCS or an inconclusive result, respectively. We never came close to these (the figure presented in an earlier post is misinterpreted)".
The study report also clarifies this:
These rules were to limit exposure of divers to the risk of severe DCS and to limit the potentially inconclusive testing of two low-risk dive profiles.
Ask yourself: why would the authors of a study trying to show a difference between two profiles impose a stopping rule if
one of their profiles was wildly successfull? This grassy-knoll accusation of yours that
one profile was about to be "rejected" and so the authors had to concoct an excuse for terminating the trial "
early to salvage what you can" is patently ridiculous, and once again demonstrates why participants on this forum should view anything you write about decompression science with great scepticism.
We can see, the A2 profile was right down the middle (5%). It was performing as predicted, and was a well behaved test sample.
There was no excessive injury rates present.
There would have been had the trial not been terminated in accordance with its pre-defined rules. Excess injury in this context (and from the perspective of the IRB) meant any further cases of DCS beyond those required to achieve an answer to the question. Thus, if the trial had continued after the experimental end point had been reached, that would constitute excessive injury in the eyes of the IRB.
tomfcrist:
If A1 and A2 both claim to have 5% pdcs, but in reality A1 is 1% pdcs...you are no longer comparing apples to apples. The test is invalid at that point.
Neither you nor Ross understand the relevance of the pre-trial predictions of DCS rates for the two profiles. Such predictions of risk or predicted differences between interventions (be they two decompression profiles or a drug vs placebo) are used to power a study (that is, to calcuate the number of subjects needed to demonstrate the predicted difference between the profiles to a level of statistical significance). But there is nothing that says the trial is invalid if the interventions don't match those risk predictions. Ask yourself: if we were so confident in those predictions, what would be the point in doing the study?
The fact that one or both profiles did not behave according pre-trial predictions is a legitmate outcome of the study: it does not invalidate it in any way.
Simon M