Evidence Based Medicine Flashcards

1
Q

When is EBM used?

A

it is only a tool in clinical decision making, clinicians should use critically appraised information for optimal patient care
not used as the ultimate reason behind clinical decisions

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2
Q

What should not be considered to assess causality?

A

disease prevalence

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3
Q

What is critical for a causal pathway between exposure and outcome?

A

temporal relationship

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4
Q

What does bias lead to?

A

incorrect estimate of association

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5
Q

How can this bias best be addressed?

A

considering potential bias in study

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6
Q

What is most important when deciding whether to prescribe homeopathic medicine?

A

systematic review

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7
Q

Why does EBM matter to clinicians?

A
BETTER SERVICE FOR PATIENTS
patient care and safety
medical knowledge 
professionalism
revalidation - to be up to date
practice based learning and improvement
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8
Q

What are some criticisms of EBM?

A

academic exercise - no relevance to clinical practice
time consuming
EBM jargon used to justify decisions is not appropriate

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9
Q

What is the role of EBM in clinical medicine?

A

CLINICAL FINDINGS - how to gather/interpret findings from history/physical examination properly
AETIOLOGY - identify disease causes (iatrogenic forms)
CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS - knowing how often/when disease manifests clinically
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS - select patients serious/responsive to treatment
DIAGNOSTIC TESTS - how to select /interpret diagnostic tests, confirm exclude diagnosis based on precision, accuracy, expense, safety
PROGNOSIS - how to estimate patients likely clinical course, anticipate complications
THERAPY - how to select treatments to offer, weigh up risks and benefits
PREVENTION - reduce chance of disease by identifying risk factors, how to diagnose early via screening

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10
Q

Hierarchy of studies

A

Systematic review/meta analysis

  • avoid large sample size/cost of RCTs
  • use series of smaller studies to select upon quality and then do analysis
  • pool results to give results for larger study

RCTs

  • gold standard for CTs, surgical interventions
  • treatment effect demonstrated needs to be large
  • expensive

Cohort

  • group of people before condition then observe exposures/risk factors
  • better for common conditions
  • less prone to bias

Case control
- better for rare conditions

Ecological studies
- descriptive study using correlations between populations with different exposures

Descriptive/cross sectional study

  • surveys/analysis on routinely taken data
  • hard to show causal relationship
  • surveys, census

Case report/series

  • not evidence used to support practice
  • describes a/some cases
  • useful to pick out new syndromes/conditions
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11
Q

What principle is homeopathy based on?

A

like causes like
ultra-diluted so no longer harmful
NHS spends 4 million/year treating 54,000 patients in 4 homeopathic hospitals
Only 2 NHS funded as there is no evidence to support homeopathic treatments

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12
Q

How do RCTs work?

A

comparison against placebos (controls)

people allocated randomnly

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13
Q

What are negatives to RCTs?

A
inappropriate controls
missing trials (hidden trials to make results bias)
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14
Q

What is the MMR vaccine?

A

combines 3 vaccines
given 2 stages - 12/15 months, 3/5 yrs
death of children catching disease dropped since introduced in 1988

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15
Q

What did mumps cause?

A

viral meningitis

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16
Q

What does rubella vaccine prevent?

A

babies getting damaged if mother catches rubella when pregnant

17
Q

MMR vaccine studies?

A
  • GI disease/autism caused by MMR vaccine
  • causal relationship flawed as it did not consider (3) before declaring causal relationship
    BIAS
    CHANCE
    CONFOUNDING FACTORS
  • MMR vaccine discontinued leading to increased deaths from infectious diseases
  • vaccine later reinstated as side effects not proven to be directly linked to vaccine