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Evidence Based Medicine (EBM), using the best evidence in the literature for the best care for an individual patient, sounds very simple. Yet, most medical students and physicians do not have the mathematical background or training to critically evaluate published research. This 'users guide' to EBM helps you become a more discriminating reader of the medical literature. An introduction to scientific methods and study design then leads on to a better understanding of measurements and sources of bias. There is a brief introduction to statistics and hypothesis testing (Type I and II errors) and measures of risk and efficacy. The second half of the book teaches medical decision-making including discussions of the clinical examination and sources of bias in that examination, likelihood ratios, sensitivity, specificity, and predictive values and advanced topics in medical decision making. This is an ideal introductory text for medical students and all health-care professionals.
Evidence-based medicine. --- Evidence-Based Medicine. --- Evidence-based medicine
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"What roles do different kinds of knowledge play in medicine? What roles should they play? What standards (epistemic, ethical, practical) should be met before knowledge is used to develop policy or practice? Medical decision-making, whether in the clinic or at the policy level, can have serious and far-reaching consequences. It is therefore important to base decisions on the best available knowledge. Yet deciding what should count as the best available knowledge is not easy. This important book addresses philosophical questions about what kinds of knowledge should be taken into account and how knowledge should inform practice and policy. The chapters in Knowing and Acting in Medicine examine the relationship between knowledge and action in medical research, practice and policy. "Knowledge" is broadly construed to include knowledge from clinical, laboratory, or social science research, and from the clinical encounter, as well as broader background assumptions prevalent in society that inform both the kinds of knowledge that are taken to be relevant to medicine and how that knowledge is interpreted in decision-making. Such knowledge may be relevant not only to clinical decision-making with regard to the care of individual patients but also to the practice of scientific research, the development of policy and practice guidelines, and decisions made by patients or by patient advocacy groups."--Back cover.
Clinical Decision-Making --- Evidence-Based Medicine. --- Evidence-based medicine --- Evidence-based medicine. --- Medicine --- Medicine --- Ethics. --- Decision making --- Decision making.
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Dentistry --- Dental Research --- Evidence-Based Medicine --- Evidence-based dentistry --- Evidence-based medicine --- Evidence-based dentistry. --- Evidence-based medicine. --- Dental Research. --- Evidence-Based Medicine. --- Dentistry - Miscellanea
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"Obesity poses one of the greatest public health challenges of the 21st century, creating serious health, economic, and social consequences for individuals and society. Despite acceleration in efforts to characterize, comprehend, and act on this problem, including implementation of preventive interventions, further understanding is needed on the progress and effectiveness of these interventions. Evaluating Obesity Prevention Efforts develops a concise and actionable plan for measuring the nation's progress in obesity prevention efforts--specifically, the success of policy and environmental strategies recommended in the 2012 IOM report Accelerating Progress in Obesity Prevention: Solving the Weight of the Nation. This book offers a framework that will provide guidance for systematic and routine planning, implementation, and evaluation of the advancement of obesity prevention efforts. This framework is for specific use with the goals and strategies from the 2012 report and can be used to assess the progress made in every community and throughout the country, with the ultimate goal of reducing the obesity epidemic. It offers potentially valuable guidance in improving the quality and effect of the actions being implemented. The recommendations of Evaluating Obesity Prevention Efforts focus on efforts to increase the likelihood that actions taken to prevent obesity will be evaluated, that their progress in accelerating the prevention of obesity will be monitored, and that the most promising practices will be widely disseminated."--Publisher's description.
Obesity --- Evidence-based medicine. --- Prevention --- Evaluation. --- Prevention.
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43074509
Evidence based onderzoek --- Internet --- Evidence-based medicine
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Clinical trials. --- Evidence-based medicine. --- Pain --- Therapy.
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Evidence-based medicine. --- Health education. --- Health promotion.
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