Title: Evidence Based Practice for Beginners
1Evidence Based Practice for Beginners
- An Introduction to EBP
- Joanne Oakes, Clinical Effectiveness Support
Officer - North Tees PCT
2Workshop Structure
- Background research and EBP
- What is the PICO structure and how is it useful?
- Making sense of research papers how to appraise
a paper and work out what the numbers really
mean. - Interactive and Informal (and at times Intense so
be warned!)
3- Lets start with a quiz!
- (You may think this is a bit cruel at first but
youll see the reasoning behind it later...)
4Early research James Lind and Scurvy
- In 1747 James Lind performed an experiment to
determine what might be effective as a cure for
scurvy. - Lind divided his 12 men into 6 groups of two. All
12 shared a common diet for breakfast, lunch and
dinner but each group received a different
supplement ranging from half a pint of sea water
daily to 2 oranges and 1 lemon daily.
5Randomised Controlled Trials (RCTs)
- Early randomised controlled trials were carried
out by farmers in the former Yugoslavia - Seeds were randomised to different conditions
(e.g. receiving a particular fertiliser, more or
less water, a control group etc) in a controlled
environment.
6Different types of Research Methods
Systematic Review
Meta-Analysis
Randomised Controlled Trial
Cohort Study
Quantitative
Case Control Study
Descriptive Studies
Qualitative
7What is Evidence Based Practice?
8What is Evidence Based Practice?
- Evidence-based practice (EBP) is the integration
of best research evidence with clinical expertise
and patient values.
9Implementing Research Findings in Practice (EBP
Cycle)
Need for a decision
Implement findings
Information need
Formulate answerable question
Appraise for validity and usefulness
Find evidence from research
10Example of an information need.
- Mrs Itchy has three children Bobby, 6, Billy, 9
and Belinda, 13. Bobby keeps coming home from
school infected with head lice and passing them
on to his siblings and parents. Mrs Itchy is
finding that its costing her a small fortune for
expensive treatments from the chemist. She
wonders whether buying a nit comb would be a
better alternative.
11PICO
- P Patient/ Population/ Problem
- I Intervention
- C Comparison/ Control
- O Outcome
- Exercise create a PICO structure for the head
lice example.
12Finding the information
- Electronic databases
- Journal Articles (electronic and paper)
- Internet
- Courses are available for people whod like to
further develop their searching skills and
theyre FREE!
13So weve found 3 papers which is best?
- Exercise
- We have carried out a search and tracked down
three papers on head lice that look interesting.
Look at their PICO structures and see if any of
them warrant further investigation. -
14Appraising the paper
- Validity
- Were patients randomised into the different
treatment groups? - Were all of the patients who started the trial
accounted for at the end of the trial? (Was
anyone not followed up? Were patients analysed
using the intention to treat principle?) - Were patients, health workers and study personnel
blind to treatment? - Were the groups similar at the start of the
trial? - Were the groups treated equally apart from the
intervention?
15What do all of the numbers mean?
16Control Event Rate and Experimental Event Rate
- CER No of events in the control group (e.g
deaths) - No of patients in the control group
- EER No of events in the experiment
group - No of patients in the experiment group
- Exercise work out the CER and EER of being
cured from head lice from the head lice paper - CER 31/40 0.775 78 EER 12/32 0.375
38
17Absolute Benefit Increase
- ABI Absolute difference between the CER and the
EER - (i.e. CER - EER)
- (Alternatively called the Absolute Risk Reduction
(ARR) when looking at a negative outcome) - Exercise work out the ABI from the head lice
paper - 78 - 38 40. This means that if 100 people
used malathion instead of bug busting, 40 would
better off.
18Number Needed to Treat
- We know from the ABI that treating 100 people
with malathion instead of bug-busting will see 40
of them better off. - So how many do we need to treat to see 1 person
better off? - We use the calculation 100/ABI NNT
- (If you remember algebra from school its just a
case of dividing both sides by the ABI i.e if 100
ABI then 100/ABI ABI/ABI 1) - Exercise work out the NNT for the head lice
paper - 100/40 2.5. Always round the NNT up 3. That
means that we need to treat 3 people with
malathion to see one extra person head lice free
seven days after the end of the treatment.
19Absolute and Relative
75p
1
Has only gone up by 25p (absolute increase) but
25p is a third of the original price so you could
say that the price has gone up 33 (relative
increase).
20Relative Benefit (RB) and Relative Benefit
Increase (RBI)
- The relative benefit (or relative risk if youre
looking at a negative outcome) looks at your
chance of having the outcome in the experimental
group compared with your chance of having the
outcome in the control group. - RB EER/CER
- RBI 1-RB
- Exercise work out the RB and the RBI for the
head lice paper - RB 38/78 0.487 49 RBI 1-0.489 51
- This means that you are increasing the relative
benefit by 51
21It sometimes helps to think of it in terms of a
chart.
Relative Benefit Increase
22Last bit of stats!
- Confidence Intervals and Statistical
Significance. - A 95 confidence interval means that you can
expect the true result to lie within the given
limits 95 times out of 100. - If the 95 confidence intervals crosses 1 then
the result is NOT statistically significant (this
is because a value of 1 means that there is no
difference between the interventions). - e.g 3.2 (0.6 to 7.1).
23Transferability and Patient Values
- Can the results be applied to the local
population? - Were all clinically important outcomes
considered? - Does the regimen suit the individual patient?
24Implementation something to think about
- Even when you do have a good research base it
often takes an age to implement the findings! - Going back to the James Lind example, although
his research was carried out in 1747, it wasnt
until 1795 that lemon juice was issued to sailors
which banished scurvy from the fleet. - And even in the modern day we havent got all
that much quicker! Consistent research on
Thrombolisis has been around since at least 1970
but weve only really starting implementing it
over the past few years.
25Quiz Time Again!
- Now lets work out your ABSOLUTE improvement and
your RELATIVE improvement from the two different
test results.
26How do I find out more?
- Visit www.teesebp.net or try reading one of the
following
Evidence Based Medicine Toolkit Douglas Badenoch,
Carl HeneghanBMJ Books November 2001
How to Read a Paper The basics of evidence based
medicine Trisha GreenhalghBMJ Books November
2000
Evidence Based Medicine, Second Edition How to
Practice and Teach EBM David L. Sackett
(Editor)Churchill Livingstone November 1999
27