1. Coyne, J. (2012). “Strong evidence” for a treatment evaporates with a closer look: Many psychotherapies are similarly vulnerable. http://blogs.plos.org/mindthebrain/2012/11/26/strong-evidence-for-a-treatment-evaporates-with-a-closer-look-many-psychotherapies-are-similarly-vulnerable/ (Gecreëerd: November 26).
2. Coyne, J. (2014). Are meta-analyses done by promoters of psychological treatments as tainted as those done by Pharma? http://blogs.plos.org/mindthebrain/2014/05/20/meta-analyses-done-promoters-psychological-treatments-tainted-meta-analyses-done-pharma/ (Gecreëerd: May 20).
3. Coyne, J. (2015). BMC Medicine gets caught up in Triple P Parenting promoter’s war on critics and null findings. http://blogs.plos.org/mindthebrain/2015/03/16/bmc-medicine-gets-caught-up-in-triple-p-parenting-promoters-war-on-critics-and-null-findings/ (Gecreëerd: March 16).
4. Coyne, J., & Kwakkenbos, L. (2013). Triple P‑Positive Parenting programs: the folly of basing social policy on underpowered flawed studies. BMC Medicine, 11, 11.
5. Eisner, M., Humphreys, D.K., Wilson, P., & Gardner, F. (2015). Disclosure of financial conflicts of interests in interventions to improve child psychosocial health: A cross-sectional study. PLoS ONE, 10, e0142803.