How to Read a Paper von Trisha Greenhalgh | The Basics of Evidence-Based Medicine | ISBN 9781444334364

How to Read a Paper

The Basics of Evidence-Based Medicine

von Trisha Greenhalgh
Buchcover How to Read a Paper | Trisha Greenhalgh | EAN 9781444334364 | ISBN 1-4443-3436-0 | ISBN 978-1-4443-3436-4
„To some extent forget the “evidence-based medicine„ tag; while some chapters are specific to medical research, many others have generic value for any field of research. This is a useful supplement that will aid anyone new to the assessment game.“ (Online Information Review, 2011)„In summary, this book presents with not only some interesting research material itself, but also provides valuable insight into the reading and interpretation of technical and research papers. As a laboratory professional, this text can help to move you from merely a reader to papers to a user of papers. This step can take you to a new level in your laboratory career. Definitely worth the read or at least the scan.“ (Advance for Medical Laboratory Professionals, 10 October 2011)„It will be a great tool for students, teachers and others in the world of academia, as well as patients who want to find out more about their condition, and who are new to reading journal papers and other documents which consider evidence-based medicine. It is good to see this book in its 4th edition and this reviewer hopes it continues to be revised as it really does provide a basic one-stop shop if you are new to evidence-based medicine.“ (The Encephalitis Society, 2011)„Writing for health students and professionals, and anyone wanting to assess the validity of articles, Greenhalgh (primary health care, Queen Mary, U. of London, UK) explains the principles of evidencebased medicine and how to critically evaluate clinical research papers. She details how to evaluate different types of papers, such as papers on drug treatments and simple interventions, diagnostic and screening tests, those that summarize other papers, guidelines, economic analyses, and qualitative research.“ (Book News, September 2010)Trisha Greenhalgh is a doctor, not a statistician, and she is writing about a topic, Evidence-Based Medicine (EBM) that might appear at first to be irrelevant to us statisticians. It is not irrelevant. Any statistician who works extensively with health care professionals should embrace the EBM movement.„ (Journal of Biopharmaceutical Statistics, 2011)“The book does show you how to put your brain into thinking gear and not just absorb information without thinking about it making this an excellent book. If I can react so strongly in this review, then it has to be worth something." (SFCrowsnest. co. uk, July 2010)

How to Read a Paper

The Basics of Evidence-Based Medicine

von Trisha Greenhalgh
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.
Changes for the 4th edition The fourth edition will include two new chapters on important developments in health care research and delivery, but otherwise retains its original style, size, and scope. * New chapter on quality improvement - describing papers on quality improvement projects using ebm methods; this will extend the readership to non clinical health care professionals working in hospitals and family practice, and to nurse specialists and practice nurses working in this field * New chapter on complex interventions - how to set up research projects involving both qualitative and quantitative methodology (known as mixed methods) * Thorough revision and updating of existing chapters and references * New illustrations - diagrammatic representations of ebm concepts