If you have a statistics background, it's pretty easy to tell that it's significant given the numbers (2 of 41 in the fish oil group and 11 of 40 in the placebo).
The exact p-value is in the paper (0.007), or very significant. It's often difficult to get those kind of p-values in real world settings:
Thank you for that. I don't have a statistics background, so I was a bit unsure of how seriously I should take the findings given that it was described as "preliminary."
Wow. That's almost unbelievably significant for a study of a damn nutritional supplement. If this is replicable, let's hope this leads to new, more effective treatments for mental illness.
The exact p-value is in the paper (0.007), or very significant. It's often difficult to get those kind of p-values in real world settings:
http://archpsyc.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/67/2/146?l...