Those twins studies constitutes a low-power measurement of effects of whatever it is that parents in the broad population happen to be doing during the time period of the study. It should not be confused with a measurement of the effects of best practice. Many professional and parent-mediated interventions have been shown to have significant effects in random controlled trials or by other means that are not confounded by genetics. As a broad estimate, any intervention that health insurance will pay is such an evidence-based intervention and there are more outside of that category, the standard for which evidence-based intervention are cover vary from state to state, nation to nation. Some of these have long-term effects.
You write “barring...trauma”. Is the definition of “trauma” broad enough to capture all the evidence-based interventions?
Those twins studies constitutes a low-power measurement of effects of whatever it is that parents in the broad population happen to be doing during the time period of the study.
Wow, I never thought of it that way. Thanks
It should not be confused with a measurement of the effects of best practice.
Aren’t twin studies best practice? What’s better?
As a broad estimate, any intervention that health insurance will pay is such an evidence-based intervention and there are more outside of that category, the standard for which evidence-based intervention are cover vary from state to state, nation to nation. Some of these have long-term effects.
That’s a useful hereustic. Thanks for making it so clear :)
You write “barring...trauma”. Is the definition of “trauma” broad enough to capture all the evidence-based interventions?
Those twins studies constitutes a low-power measurement of effects of whatever it is that parents in the broad population happen to be doing during the time period of the study. It should not be confused with a measurement of the effects of best practice. Many professional and parent-mediated interventions have been shown to have significant effects in random controlled trials or by other means that are not confounded by genetics. As a broad estimate, any intervention that health insurance will pay is such an evidence-based intervention and there are more outside of that category, the standard for which evidence-based intervention are cover vary from state to state, nation to nation. Some of these have long-term effects.
You write “barring...trauma”. Is the definition of “trauma” broad enough to capture all the evidence-based interventions?
Wow, I never thought of it that way. Thanks
Aren’t twin studies best practice? What’s better?
That’s a useful hereustic. Thanks for making it so clear :)
I’m a little confused here.