EBM module 1&2 Flashcards

1
Q

What are RCT

A

volunteers are randomly assigned to study groups to compare two treatments/interventions (experimental vs. control group)

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2
Q

What is a systematic review

A

when you use scientific methods to search and summarize all available studies that address a research question

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3
Q

What is a meta analysis

A

use of statistical methods to combine data from studies included in a systematic review

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4
Q

Why are systematic reviews and meta analysis beneficial

A

They summarize large amounts of information into manageable, more easily implemented pieces

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5
Q

What research healthcare questions are best answered by a RCT

A

Prevention (how can a problem be prevented)
Screening (will early detection cause a different outcome)
Diagnostic accuracy
Therapy (what should be done to treat it)
Harm (will there be negative side effects)

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6
Q

What research healthcare questions are best answered by Cohort studies

A
Diagnostic accuracy 
Prognosis 
Incidence 
Prevalence (also, cross-sectional)
Etiology 
Harm (also case control)
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7
Q

What is PICO

A

Population, Intervention, Comparison, Outcome

good research question!

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8
Q

What is a cross-sectional study

A

Snapshot; measures distribution of characteristics in a population at a specific point in time

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9
Q

What is a case-control study

A

Compares people WITH specific outcome/disease to people withOUT, and looks retrospectively to find associations

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10
Q

What is a cohort

A

group of people, followed over time

outcomes are compared to analyze variables

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11
Q

What is absolute risk

A

risk of an outcome of a given treatment

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12
Q

What is absolute risk difference

A

change in risk of an outcome of a given treatment in relation to a comparative one
ex: drug A has 1% risk. drug B has 3% risk
absolute risk difference is 2%

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13
Q

What is relative risk

A

AKA risk ratio; ratio of risk between intervention group and control

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14
Q

What do the different risk ratios tell you

A

1: no difference
<1: less risky
>1: more risky
Ex- drug A:drug B= 0.1:0.3= 0.33 (top is less risky)

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15
Q

What is relative risk difference

A

AKA relative risk reduction; proportional reduction in risk of one treatment compared to the other
Ex- if risk ratio is 0.33, RRR is 1-0.33=0.66
drug A is 66% better than drug B

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16
Q

What is selection bias

A

bias in selection of individuals, groups, or data for analysis so that proper randomization not achieved

17
Q

What is performance bias

A

Improper blinding of participants and/or personnel

18
Q

What is information bias

A

a flaw in measuring exposure, covariate, or outcome variables resulting in inaccurate information between groups

19
Q

What is a hazard ratio

A

similar to relative risk (risk ratio)

calculates risk at a particular point in time, using survival analysis