Evidence Based Dentistry Flashcards
what is a risk?
number of events of interest over the total number of observations
what is odds?
number of events of interest over the number without the event
what are the questions to ask when interpreting risk?
risk of what? how big is the risk? does the risk information reasonably apply to me or my patient? how does this risk compare with other risks?
what are the questions to ask when you see messages about risk reduction?
reduced risk of what? how big is the risk of reduction? does the risk reduction information reasonably apply to me? any downsides? is the benefit worth the downsides?
what are the starting and modified risks?
the chances of the outcome in the untreated and treated groups
what is relative risk reduction?
makes even small risk reductions sound big
what is the absolute risk difference?
difference in risk between groups
what is NNT
number of patients you would need to treat to prevent one patient from developing the disease/condition/outcome
what does a confidence interval which overlaps the vale of no difference indicate?
insufficient evidence for a difference between the treatment and control group in the population
for a difference between two values what is the value of no difference?
0
for a ratio between two values what is the value of no difference?
1
what are the 3 main types of study designs in human research?
observational uncontrolled studies, controlled studies, randomised controlled trials
what are the different types of studies?
case series/case reports, ecological studies, cross-sectional surveys, case-control studies, cohort studies, randomised controlled trials, systematic reviews and meta analyses
what is a case report/case series
a report on a single patient or series of patients with an outcome of interest, used for hypothesis generation
what is a cross-sectional study?
the observation of a defined population at a single point in time (or time interval), used for estimating prevalence of a disease