Evidence Based Dentistry Flashcards

1
Q

what is a risk?

A

number of events of interest over the total number of observations

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2
Q

what is odds?

A

number of events of interest over the number without the event

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3
Q

what are the questions to ask when interpreting risk?

A

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?

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4
Q

what are the questions to ask when you see messages about risk reduction?

A

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?

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5
Q

what are the starting and modified risks?

A

the chances of the outcome in the untreated and treated groups

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6
Q

what is relative risk reduction?

A

makes even small risk reductions sound big

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7
Q

what is the absolute risk difference?

A

difference in risk between groups

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8
Q

what is NNT

A

number of patients you would need to treat to prevent one patient from developing the disease/condition/outcome

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9
Q

what does a confidence interval which overlaps the vale of no difference indicate?

A

insufficient evidence for a difference between the treatment and control group in the population

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10
Q

for a difference between two values what is the value of no difference?

A

0

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11
Q

for a ratio between two values what is the value of no difference?

A

1

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12
Q

what are the 3 main types of study designs in human research?

A

observational uncontrolled studies, controlled studies, randomised controlled trials

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13
Q

what are the different types of studies?

A

case series/case reports, ecological studies, cross-sectional surveys, case-control studies, cohort studies, randomised controlled trials, systematic reviews and meta analyses

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14
Q

what is a case report/case series

A

a report on a single patient or series of patients with an outcome of interest, used for hypothesis generation

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15
Q

what is a cross-sectional study?

A

the observation of a defined population at a single point in time (or time interval), used for estimating prevalence of a disease

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16
Q

what is case control study?

A

the study of people with a disease and a suitable control group of people without the disease - looks back in time at exposure to a particular risk factor in both groups, used for looking at potential causes of disease

17
Q

what is a cohort study?

A

establish a group of individuals in population, measure exposures and follow up after a period of time, used for estimating incidence of disease and investigating causes of disease

18
Q

what is the gold standard study design?

A

randomised controlled trials

19
Q

what does a randomised controlled trial provide?

A

strongest evidence on effectiveness of treatments

20
Q

what are the 4 design elements of an RCT?

A

specification of participants, control/comparison groups, randomisation, blinding/masking

21
Q

what are the inclusion/exclusion criteria to consider with an RCT?

A

age, disease severity, unambiguous, exact definitions

22
Q

why is randomisation important?

A

to minimise bias of older patients/more severe disease patients

23
Q

how do you randomise patients into their groups?

A

assign participant to one of the two groups, performed by a computer

24
Q

what is the advantage of randomisation?

A

random allocation ensures each individual entered into trial has equal chance of being allocated to any treatment arm

25
Q

which groups of people are not allowed to know which group a patient has been placed in with an RCT?

A

participant, administrator of treatment, assessor of outcome, data analyst

26
Q

what is the advantage of an RCT?

A

provide strongest and most direct epidemiologic evidence for causality

27
Q

what are the disadvantages of RCTs?

A

more difficult to design and conduct than observational studies, still some risk of bias and generalizability often limited , not suitable for all research questions