CPP2017 Systematic reviews spl Flashcards
what is evidence-based medicine?
the conscientious, explicit, and judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients
- mostly using systematic reviews
what is the Cochrane library used for?
a key resource for systematic research
- provides high-quality systematic reviews of randomised controlled trial (RCT) evidence on healthcare interventions
what is the cycle of evidence-based medicine?
- identify a focused answerable question
- search for the evidence
- critically appraise the evidence
- apply to practice
- audit the practice
- modify the practice…
what is PICO?
- population (what characteristics does patient have)
- intervention (what treatment/care/factors are you inputting)
- comparison (alternative to consider/placebo/no intervention)
- outcome (what are you expecting/measuring)
why is Trip medical data base very useful?
- uses high-quality evidence based resources including NICE and Cochrane library
- ranks results by level of evidence and allowsn= filtering
what is the pyramid for evidence in clinical medicine?
- the higher up the pyramid, the higher quality
- evidence-based guidelines at the top (secondary evidence)
- systematic reviews second (secondary evidence)
- primary evidence at the bottom = individual studies, e.g. RCTs, cohort, cross-sectional, case-control studies
what is secondary evidence
evidence from gathering, summarising and analysing primary research sources
- gives more conclusive results on a single question from multiple resources
- e.g. systematic reviews, evidence-based guidelines
what is primary evidence
- first-hand raw information/evidence from a single study
-e.g. cohort study, RCT
what are the main 2 medical databases?
Pubmed, medline
what is a pre-appraised evidence resource?
where authors have searched for all available evidence, appraised it to select only the most trustworthy and presented it in a easy to use format
what are systematic reviews of randomised controlled trials (RCTs) used for?
- address a specific research question
- use a range of medical databases
- tries to include all published and unpublished trials on the research question
- has more than 1 investigator involved in assessing the eligibility of the studies
- assess the methodological quality of each trial
- makes an assessment if the treatment effects differ substantially
- uses meta-analysis to combine results from individual trials
- produces a combines treatment effect that will have a smaller confidence interval than the individual trials
what is the purpose of a forest plot?
- graphical representation of the findings from multiple studies
- compare between studies and statistical significance
- shows the confidence intervals and risk ratios
what is heterogeneity?
- variability among studies in a systematic review, the results in each study are not consistant
- a high p-value for heterogeneity suggests it is insignificant which is good and the results are valid
what does a risk ratio of 0.83 mean?
there is a 17% decreased risk of the outcome
what does a risk ratio of 1 or greater mean?
there is no reduction in the risk of the outcome/ there is an increased risk of the outcome