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How to Read a Paper 4th Edition - The Basics of Evidence-Based Medicine

English · Paperback / Softback

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The Basics of EvidenceBased Medicine. .

List of contents

Foreword to the first edition by Professor Sir David Weatherall
1 Why read papers at all? 1.1 Does 'evidence-based medicine' simply mean 'reading papers in medical journals'?
1.2 Why do people often groan when you mention evidence-based medicine?
1.3 Before you start: formulate the problem
2 Searching the literature
2.1 Searching for evidence: key principles
2.2 Medline and other 'raw' databases
2.3 Databases with search filters
2.4 Databases of pre-appraised articles
2.5 Databases of synthesised evidence
2.6& Databases of ongoing research
2.7 Citation searching
2.8 Human contact sources
2.9 Worked examples of search problems
3 Getting your bearings: what is this paper about?
3.1 The science of 'trashing' papers
3.2 Three preliminary questions to get your bearings
3.3 Randomised controlled trials
3.4 Cohort studies
3.5 Case-control studies
3.6 Cross-sectional surveys
3.7 Case reports
3.8 The traditional hierarchy of evidence
3.9 A note on ethics and governance
4 Assessing methodological quality
4.1 Was the study original?
4.2 Who is the study about?
4.3 Was the design of the study sensible?
4.4 Was systematic bias avoided or minimised?
4.5 Was assessment "blind"?
4.6 Were preliminary statistical questions addressed?
5 Statistics for the non-statistician
5.1 How can non-statisticians evaluate statistical tests?
5.2 Have the authors set the scene correctly?
5.3 Paired data, tails, and outliers
5.4& Correlation and causation
5.5 Probability and confidence
5.6 The bottom line (quantifying the risk of benefit and harm)
6 Papers that report trials of drug treatments and other simple interventions?
6.1 'Evidence' and marketing
6.2 Making decisions about therapy
6.3 Surrogate endpoints
6.4 What information to expect in a paper describing a randomised controlled trial
6.5 Getting worthwhile evidence from pharmaceutical representatives
7 Papers that report trials of complex interventions
7.1 'Evidence' and marketing
7.2 Making decisions about therapy
7.3 Surrogate endpoints
7.4 Getting worthwhile evidence from pharmaceutical representatives
8 Papers that report diagnostic or screening tests
8.1 Ten men in the dock
8.2 Validating diagnostic tests against a gold standard
8.3 Ten questions to ask about a paper which claims to validate a diagnostic or screening test
8.4 A note on likelihood ratios
9 Papers that summarise other papers (systematic reviews and meta-analyses)
9.1 When is a review systematic?
9.2 Evaluating systematic reviews
9.3 Meta-analysis for the non-statistician
9.4 Explaining heterogeneity
10 Papers that tell you what to do (guidelines)
10.1 The great guidelines debate
10.2 Do guidelines change clinicians' behaviour?
10.3 Ten questions to ask about a clinical guideline
11 Papers that tell you what things cost (economic analyses)
11.1 What is an economic evaluation?
11.2 Measuring the costs and benefits of health interventions
11.3 Ten questions to ask about an economic evaluation
12 Papers that go beyond numbers (qualitative research)
12.1 What is qualitative research?
12.2 Evaluating papers that describe qualitative research
13 Papers that report questionnaire research
13.1 The rise and rise of questionnaire research
13.2 Ten questions to ask about a paper describing questionnaire research
14 Papers that report quality improvement case studies

Product details

Authors Trisha Greenhalgh
Publisher Blackwell Scientific Publishers Ltd
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 27.02.2010
 
EAN 9781444334364
ISBN 978-1-4443-3436-4
Dimensions 138 mm x 215 mm x 11 mm
Series BMJ Books
BMJ Books
Subject Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Medicine

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