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Finding answers to questions in evidence based medicine (EBM)
By
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Also try out my other web: www.cmwr.org

1. Formulate a searchable question 2. Search 3. Critical appraisal
Finding answers to clinical questions is a great challenge, and Scott Richardson's contribution to forming structured 4-part questions as described below, is a prerequisite.
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1. Who?
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2. What?
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3. Alternatively?
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4. Outcome?
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In children with acute otitis media aged 2-4 years
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Antibiotics
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No treatment except paracetamol Once daily regimens Nasal decongestants
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No pain after two days? Side-effects
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In men with cancer of the prostate younger than n 70 years
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Staging with MRI
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Gleason scoring
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Predictive value? Likelihood ratio?
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2. Search When "looking for answers", use the sources in the priority listed below, structured into a "7-step way for finding best evidence":
1 The Cochrane library - the ultimate choice, a multinational effort systematically organizing information 2 Secondary Journals - "let others critically appraise and present articles" 3 MEDLINE - one of many databases which are free and with different interfaces that might help you 4 Primary Journals on the web, often searchable, and often in flutist .pdf versions 5 Guidelines on the web, well aware of the varying quality 6 Internet - the distressingly, unsorted information megaworld where no quality filtering exists 7 Mailbases for posting questions I still have not found an answer to
3. Critical appraisal Basically, critical appraisal is based on 3 steps: 1. Internal validity (How well is this study performed?) 2. Results (What does it show?) 3. External validity (Can I use it?)
4. EBM for beginners Those who need a general introduction into EBM, I have organized general link sites which serve as educational starting points into the EBM world.
Many of us are disillusioned by the overwhelming information now available at our fingertips at the computer- and do not know where or how to start looking for answers to their questions. As a result of my own failures and struggling, I have tried to compile a ranking list of where to look.
Searching
1. The Cochrane library Remember that if you are are looking quality assessed RCTs, you need to add "and CCTR" when looking for a publication type, unless you also want to search the full CCTR, called CENTRAL.
2. Secondary journals These are the journals where someone has read a paper, summarised and critically appraised it, giving you a bottom-line to share in the decision-making with your patient.
3. MEDLINE
Other Medline interfaces
These are Norwegian sites for searching books, papers, the net etc.:
KnowledgeFinder Medline Here is the wonderful spot where you can just write your 4-part question, like "In children, what is the best treatment of nocturnal enuresis?" and voila, by means of fuzzy logic it is turned into a search. The results are presented as a list where the assumed most relevant papers are listed first, instead of chronologically as in ordinary Medline. It requires subscription today
4. Primary journals
General journals
Epidemiology
Laboratory journals
Family medicine journals
5. Guidelines
6. Internet
7. Mailbases
Mailbases are useful for following debates on issues of interest toy ou, and questions may be posted to the list members, but you are expected to have done your homework and searched on your own before posting your question. There are over 2000 lists at: MailbaseElectronic Mailing List Service
Try joining the Evidence-based health list: http://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/wa.exe?SUBED1=evidence-based-health&A=1
General link sites which are great educational starting points into the EBM world
Author: Dr. Atle Klovning, MD First published: 01 November, 1997 Last editorial revision: 02 Feb, 2004 Last technical revision: 19 March, 2001
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