How to read a paper : the basics of evidence-based medicine
4th edition
2010
xvii, 238 p. : ill.
9781444334364
Anglais
1. Why read papers at all? -- 2. Searching the literature -- 3. Getting your bearings : what is this paper about? -- 4. Assessing methodological quality -- 5. Statistics for the non-statistician -- 6. Papers that report trials of drug treatments and other simple interventions -- 7. Papers that report trials of complex interventions -- 8. Papers that report diagnostic or screening tests -- 9. Papers that summarise other papers (systematic reviews and meta-analyses) -- 10. Papers that tell you what to do (guideline) -- 11. Papers that tell you what things cost (economic analyses) -- 12. Papers that go beyond numbers (qualitative research) -- 13. Papers that report qukestionnaire research -- 14. Papers that report quality improvement case studies -- 15. Getting evidence into practice
Appendices
How to Read a Paper describes the different types of clinical research reporting, and explains how to critically appraise the publications. The book provides the tools to find and evaluate the literature, and implement the findings in an evidence-based, patient-centered way. Written for anyone in the health care professions who has little or no knowledge of evidence-based medicine, it provides a clear understanding of the concepts and how to put them into practice at the basic, clinical level.
W 20.5 G813h 2010
N° | Cote | Localisation | |
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1 | W 20.5 G813h 2010 | Bibliothèque Norman-Bethune [disponible] |