5.7.1. Large magnitude of effect
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When methodologically strong observational studies yield large or very large and consistent estimates of the magnitude of a treatment or exposure effect, we may be confident about the results. In these situations, the weak study design is unlikely to explain all of the apparent benefit or harm, even though observational studies are likely to provide an overestimate of the true effect.
The larger the magnitude of effect, the stronger becomes the evidence. As a rule of thumb, the following criteria were proposed by GRADE:
- Large, i.e. RR >2 or <0.5 (based on consistent evidence from at least 2 studies, with no plausible confounders): upgrade 1 level
- Very large, i.e. RR >5 or <0.2 (based on direct evidence with no major threats to validity): upgrade 2 levels
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