A heatmap with the proportion of missing participants in each
intervention and observed comparison in the network. Each cell annotates
the median, minimum and maximum (the latter two in parenthesis) proportion
of missing participants across the corresponding trials.
The proportion of missing participants in each intervention and observed
comparison are depicted in the main diagonal and lower off-diagonal with
white and black colour, respectively. The pairwise comparisons are read
from left to right.
The 'five-and-twenty' rule of Sackett and colleagues (1997) is used to
characterise the median proportion of missing participants as being
associated with low (up to 5%), moderate (more than 5% and up to 20%),
and high risk of bias (more than 20%). Low, moderate, and high risk of
bias associated with missing participants is indicated using green, orange,
and red colour, respectively. If missing participants have not been
reported for an intervention or comparison, the corresponding cell is
indicated in grey.
The summary statistics (median, minimum and maximum) for each intervention
(main diagonal; white font) result from calculating the proportion of
missing participants in each arm of every trial and then summarising across
the corresponding trial-arms. Similarly, the summary statistics for each
observed comparison (lower off-diagonal; black font) result from
calculating the proportion of total missing participants in each trial and
then summarising across the corresponding trials.
heatmap_missing_network
can be used only for a network of
interventions. Otherwise, the execution of the function will be stopped and
an error message will be printed on the R console. Likewise, when the
number of missing participants has not been extracted for any arm of the
trials.