Evidence-Based Practice Flashcards
What is evidence-based practice?
It is the integration of best research evidence with clinical experience and patient values
What does appropriate and reliable evidence lead to?
- Bets practice
2. Reduced varition in dental care provision
In terms of evidence-based practice, what does the science aspect provide?
- Understanding the aetiology and pathogenesis of a disease or condition
- Understand how and why different people/groups of people vary in disease rates
- Understand why certain theraphy is effective or safe but others may not
What are the 3-ill approaches?
- Drill
- Fill
- Bill
What are the two types of research?
- Primary
2. Secondary
What is the primary type of research?
They are original studies, based on observation or experimentation involving animals or people
What is secondary research?
They are reviews of publishes research, drawing together the findings of two or more primary studies
What are the two types of research design?
- Experimental
2. Observational
What is experimental research design?
It is research to test a new drug or new treatment modality in a population group
What is observational research design?
Researchers observe a population group for a certain disease or condition
What is the most important relationship in evidence-based practice?
Cause-effect relationship
What are Bradford Hill’s criteria?
- Strength and consistency of the association
- Specificity
- Temporality
- Biological gradient
What is a dose-response effect?
It is the idea that increasing the cause also increases the effect (increasing smoking increases periodontitis in that population)
What is biological plausibility?
The relationship must be explainable in the light of current scientific knowledge of the disease/condition and of the nature of the cause.
Describe the evidence hierarchy from lowest to highest.
- Anecdotal
- Case report. Expert opinion
- Cross-sectional studies
- Case-control studies
- Cohort studies
- RCT
- Systematic reviews (with or without meta-analysis)
What is a systematic study?
It is a review of a body of data that uses explicit methods to locate primary studies and explicit criteria to assess their quality.
What is the aim of a systematic review?
Aim to inform and facilitate this process through research synthesis of multiple studies to enable increased and efficient access to evidence.
What is meta-analysis?
A statistical analysis that combines the results of several independent clinical trials considered by the analyst to be “combinable”.
What is an RCT?
Aims to evaluate the efficacy or effectiveness of a new medication or treatment
What is a standard design of an RCT?
Intervention vs no intervention
Why is randomization important?
Randomisation ensures that subjects receiving different treatment are comparable at the start of the study
What is the difference between random selection and randomization?
Random selection occurs prior to randomisation
What is a cohort study?
The aim is to observe changes related to a particular group of individuals
What is a case-control study?
Aims to identify differences between cases and control. Observational retrospective design, no intervention from researchers.