Title: Critical Appraisal: An Introduction
1 Critical Appraisal An Introduction
- Melanie Browne HBHSc, MLIS
- Information Specialist
-
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3Agenda
- Introduction
- Define Evidence-based clinical practice
- How to read a research article
- Search for best evidence
- Apply critical appraisal in your library
- Our new role
- Case presentation
- Resources
4Evidence-Based Medicine
- "...the conscientious, explicit, and judicious
use of current best evidence in making decisions
about the care of individual patients. - from Sackett, DL, et al. "Evidence based
medicine What it is and what it isn't." (BMJ
1996 312 71-2)
5- "Evidence based medicine (EBM) is an approach to
health care that promotes the collection,
interpretation, and integration of valid,
important and applicable patient-reported,
clinician-observed and research-derived evidence.
The best available evidence, moderated by patient
circumstances and preferences, is applied to
improve the quality of clinical judgements"
(McKibbon et al 1995).
6Why EBM?
- A clinician needs to read 17 peer reviewed
articles per day, every day of the year, to stay
current (Haynes 1993).
Haynes, R. (1993) Where's the meat in clinical
journals? ACP Journal Club, 119 A23-4.
There are 20 million pieces of 'evidence' of
varying quality and sometime of contradictory
conclusions.
7How Can You Access, Distil and Apply
Research/Evidence?
- Develop summaries
- Train clinicians and other health care decision
makers to find and appraise relevant evidence - Decision support systems
8Summaries With Rigorous Methodologies
- Cochrane Collaboration
- National Centre for Clinical Excellence
- Centre for Clinical Effectiveness at Monash
University
9The Argument for Evidence-Based Medicine
- Stay up to date with the current literature
- Communicate effectively
- Make the best use of information from the
history, physical examination, and diagnostic
testing - Avoid common pitfalls of clinical decision-making
10Critical Appraisal
- The assessment of evidence by systematically
reviewing its relevance, validity and results to
specific situations. - Chambers, R. (1998).
11What is best evidence?
- Using critical appraisal skills you can
understand the methods and results of the
research and then be able to assess the quality
of the research.
12- Critical appraisal Exact science
- Critical appraisal right answer
13Information Mastery
- Slawson and Shaughnessy Formula
- Usefulness of Medical Information
- Relevance x Validity____________________
- Work to Access
14- Smith R. What clinical information do doctors
need? Br Med J 1996 313 1062-8.
15- When doctors see patients they usually generate
at least one question - Most of the questions concern treatment
- Many of the questions are highly complex,
simultaneously asking about individual patients
and particular areas of medical knowledge
16- Often doctors are asking not simply for
information but for support, guidance,
affirmation, and feedback - Doctors are most likely to seek answers to these
questions from other doctors - The best information sources provide relevant,
valid material that can be accessed quickly and
with minimal effort
17Basic elements of clinical decision making
Haynes RB. Loose connections between
peer-reviewed clinical journals and clinical
practice. Ann Intern Med 1990113724-8.
18Why Should we Critically Appraise?
- Published research is not always reliable
- Published research is not always relevant
- To improve clinical effectiveness, we need a
systematic framework to interpret research
19Difficulties with Critical Appraisal
- Can be time consuming initially
- Doesnt provide an easy answer
- It could show a lack of good evidence in a
particular topic
20Key Steps to Effective Critical Appraisal
- 1. Are the results valid?
- 2. What are the results?
- 3. How will these results be relevant to
- the patient?
21Validity and Reliability
- A test is valid when it measures what its
supposed to. - If a test is reliable, it yields consistent
results. - A test can be both reliable and valid, one or the
other, or neither. - Reliability is a prerequisite for measurement
validity.
22Reliable, but Not Valid!
23Not Reliable, Not Valid!
24Reliable and Valid
25Mark Newman - Middlesex University updated 04/2001
26What a Physician can be Faced With on a Daily
Basis?
- 1 - 2 questions per patient (clinics)
- 15/patient/day (wards)
- 30 of questions are followed
- People
- Books
- Electronic resources
- 40 easy to answer
- 30 tough to answer
- 30 cannot answer
- Source Dawes M, Sampson U. Knowledge management
in clinical practice a systematic review of
information seeking behaviour in physicians. Int
J Med Inform. 2003 Aug 71(1)9-15. Review. PMID
12909153
27Steps to EBM
- 1. Formulate a clear, focused clinical question
- 2. PICO model
- 3. Search the literature for the best external
- evidence
- 4. Critically appraise the evidence for its
validity - and usefulness
- 5. Implement the useful evidence in clinical
- practice
- 6. Evaluate the results
28Question Formulation
- Not easy but EXTREMELY important
- Good questions will
- Focus/clarify your information need
- Give you some idea of where to look for
information - Give you searching concepts and terms
29Background Questions
- Often broad in nature
- Often not patient-specific but fact based
- May not need to integrate knowledge
- More common early in training/new situations
-
30Foreground Questions
- Often for a specific patient or clinical
situation - Narrow in focus
- Need to integrate external information with
clinical/situational data
31PICO Structure
- Patients P
- Intervention I
- Comparison C
- Outcome O
32Clinical Scenario
- What therapeutic agents can be used for rate
control of atrial fibrillation (AF) in a patient
with congestive heart failure (CHF)?
33Starting Point
- Department Emergency
- Population Patients with atrial fibrillation and
congestive heart failure - Intervention Rate control
- Comparison N/A
- Outcome Mortality, effectiveness of rate control
34PICO Schematic Model
Rate control
Patient w/ Atrial Fibrillation in congestive
heart failure
Effectiveness of rate control
Comparison
Rhythm control / No treatment
35General Search Strategy
Clinical problem
Define the search question
Try another relevant resource
Choose a resource/database
Create a search strategy
Create a search strategy
Summarize the evidence
Poor yield
Summarize the evidence
Try another relevant resource
Apply the evidence
Adapted from Sackett, D. et al. 2000.
Evidence-Based Medicine How to Practice and
Teach EBM. 2nd Edition. Toronto Churchill
Livingstone.
36Study Types for Question Types
Diagnosis Prospective cohort study with good quality validation against Gold Standard
Therapy Randomized controlled clinical trial (RCT)
Etiology/ Harm RCT, cohort or case-control study (probably retrospective)
Prognosis Prospective cohort study
37Does this treatment work? systematic review, RCT
How good is a diagnostic test? (prospective) cohort study
Should we screen? RCT
What causes this disease? RCT, prospective cohort study, case control study (rare diseases)
What did people think or do? cohort study, cross-sectional survey, qualitative study
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39How can we do Critical Appraisal?
- Use common sense
- Use simple checklists
- Use different checklists depending on the
different types of studies (i.e., RCTS,
systematic reviews etc) - Checklists help you focus on the important parts
of the article
40Research Methodology
- Who were the participants of the study?
- How were they recruited?
- Was there bias in the recruiting methods?
- How was the data collected?
- What statistical tests were used?
- Where the data collection methods accurate?
41Critical appraisal questions
- What is the paper about?
- Why was the study done?
- What type of study was done?
- Was it primary research (experiment, RCT, cohort,
case-control, cross-sectional, longitudinal, case
report/series)?
42Critical appraisal questions
- Was it secondary research (overview, systematic
review, meta-analysis, decision analysis,
guidelines development, economic analysis)? - Was the design appropriate (for study on
treatment, diagnosis, screening, prognosis, or
causation)?
43Critical appraisal questions
- Was the study ethical?
- Is the design right?
- (BMJ Editor's checklists)
44How to Read a Research Article? First Glance.
- Purpose of reading the paper.
- Do not read the abstract.
- Read the title, find out who the authors are and
where they work, look for sources of funding and
conflicts of interest - Look at the tables and figures
- Is there a diagram to show the flow of
participants through each stage of the study - Why was the study done and what hypothesis were
the authors testing? - What is broadly the topic of research?
- Therapy, Diagnosis, Screening, Prognosis,
Causation? - What type of study was done?
- Is this a primary (experimental, clinical trial,
survey) or a secondary paper (review,
meta-analysis, guideline, economic analysis)? - Was the study design appropriate?
- Now proceed to a critical appraisal of the paper
45Case Presentation
- Read the Ray et al(2008) paper and divide the
group into 2 for a debate on the paper Breast
size and risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus. CMAJ
46- Ray and colleagues studied data from 92 106 women
in conjunction with the Nurses' Health Study II
and found that breast size at age 20, assessed by
recall of bra cup size, correlated positively
with the incidence of type 2 diabetes
47- After adjustment for relevant factors, such as
body mass index, waist circumference and family
history of diabetes, the hazard ratio dropped to
1.58 but remained significant.
48- Nurses' Health Study II population data emanates
from women who were mainly of white ancestry, and
that their analysis is based on recall and
self-report.
49New Role of Health Sciences Librarians
- Teaching access to the literature and other
information resources - Teaching use of technology as a means to access
and manage information - Teaching skills in information organization and
critical appraisal
50Role of Librarians as Information Clinicians
- Information Clinician
- Medical Informatics Tutor
- EBM Educator
51Informationist
- A discipline requiring a combination of the
skills of a librarian, a clinical epidemiologist
and a medical scientist - Davidoff, F. Florance,V. (2000) The
Informationist A New Health Profession? Annals
of Internal Medicine, 132 996-998.
52Effective INFORMAtician
- Knows categories of information resources
- therapy, diagnosis, prognosis
- synthesized resources vs original studies
- Knows strengths/weaknesses of information
resources - Knows when to use each category
- Knows that some resources are better than others
in certain situations - Cochrane diagnostic accuracy data?
- Knows what to do with the results
53- Practical solutions - Librarian as a partner on
the teaching team teachable moments - Formal hospital library educational programs have
focused on orientation and instruction in the use
of bibliographic tools. i.e.- LATCH (Literature
Attached to Charts) and clinical medical
librarianship
54Critical Appraisal Skills Training
- Research methodology
- Statistical techniques
55Courses for Librarians Out There
- CILIP the Chartered Institute of Library and
Information Professionals - Critical appraisal skills for healthcare
librarians building on the basics - http//www.cilip.org.uk/training/training/2008/li
binfo/criticalappraisalskillsforhealthcarelibraria
nsbuildingonthebasics.htm
56General Resources
- CASP (Critical Appraisal Skills Programme) - part
of the Public Health Resource Unit based at
Oxford, CASP runs training workshops on critical
appraisal skills. - Evidence-Based Medicine Toolkit - hosted by the
University of Alberta, this is an online "box" of
handy tools to help you find, appraise, and apply
in practice, evidence-based research - How to read a paper - a set of ten guides from
the BMJ (individual links given in the relevant
section below). - Levels of Evidence - a ranking system used to
rank various study designs in order of
evidence-based merit systematic
reviews/meta-analyses and well conducted
randomised controlled trials (RCTs) are usually
seen as the best form of "evidence", with
research based on the outcome of a case series
placed somewhere near the bottom - Netting the Evidence - search for the keyword
"appraisal" to find a quality assessed list of
appraisal resources - User's guides to evidence based practice - based
on a series of articles published in JAMA, these
guides give comprehensive advice on how to find,
appraise and apply research in practice
57Keeping Current
- Daily InfoPOEMs http//www.infopoems.com/
- bmjupdates
- http//bmjupdates.mcmaster.ca/index.asp
- Tables of contents of journals
- (e.g. JAMA)
- From journal itself
- My NCBI from PUBMED
58Predictive Value of tests
Confidence Intervals
Relative Risk Reduction
Intention to treat
P Value
Relative Risk
Absolute Risk Difference
Sensitivity
Absolute Risk Reduction
Absolute Benefit Increase
Specificity
Likelihood Ratio
Numbers Needed to Treat (NNT)
Odds Ratio
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