Evidence-Based Medicine: Review of Concepts Flashcards

1
Q

What is evidence-based medicine?

A

The integration of best research evidence with clinical expertise and patient values

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2
Q

The best research evidence is ____________.

A

systematic review of RCTs

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3
Q

What three questions should you ask when evaluating a systematic review?

A
  • Are the results valid?
  • Are the results meaningful?
  • Are the results relevant to my practice?
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4
Q

What questions can you ask to assess if the results of a systematic review are valid?

A
  • Did the reviewers use the best available evidence?
  • Did the reviewers describe a comprehensive search?
  • Were the individual studies assessed for validity?
  • Did the reviewers begin with a clear, focused question?
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5
Q

Good questions to begin with ________________.

A

(1) are restricted to a defined population, (2) have a specified set of measured outcomes, and (3) pick one intervention

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6
Q

What is the difference between a systematic review and a meta-analysis?

A

Systematic reviews collect studies and compare each study’s effect, while meta-analysis numerically averages each study effect, giving a single number.

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7
Q

The Institute of Medicine (IOM) is now called the _______________.

A

National Academy of Medicine (NAM)

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8
Q

What distinguishes a narrative literature review from a systematic review?

A

Literature reviews do not use a defined system and are thus subject to selection bias.

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9
Q

What criteria need to be defined in a good systematic review?

A
PICOS
Population 
Intervention 
Comparison/control
Outcome
Study types
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10
Q

What is publication bias?

A

Studies with positive results are more likely to be published, so searching from only published results yields a sample that is more likely to contain false positives.

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