Title: The importance of research to achieving excellence'
1The importance of research to achieving
excellence.
- Centre for Health and Wellbeing Research, Sunley
Management Centre, University of Northampton,
15th December 2008. - Professor Mike Kelly,
- The Centre for Public Health Excellence, NICE,
London, UK
2The importance of nineteenth century public
health in developing the evidence base
- The early pioneers John Snow, William Tennant
Gairdner, William Duncan, Edwin Chadwick, William
Farr.
3John Snow
4Gairdner
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6Farr
7Chadwick
8The classic period of public health
- The development of causal models without
necessarily understanding the mechanisms because
empirical observation had not yet revealed the
underlying causes. - Social deprivation was seen as a cause and as a
confounder (Chadwick, Gairdner)
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14- The statistical patterning of mortality and
morbidity revealed major geographical differences
(William Farr) - The measurement of occupation of head of
household in the census from 1911 demonstrated
health inequalities. - But at the same time there has been a long run
trend in health improvement.
15The long run trend
Hi
Mortality
Lo
1940
1800
Time
16Decline in mortality the middle classes
Mortality
17Decline in mortality the less well to do
Hi
Mortality
1940
18Implications
- Causal agents
- Patterning by time, place and person.
19Key epidemiological studies
- Smoking and lung cancer (Doll Hill 1952)
- Exercise and heart attack (Morris et al 1953)
- Asbestos and lung cancer (Doll 1955)
20Austen Bradford-Hill
21Bradford-Hills principles
- Temporal sequence.
- Strength of association.
- Dose response relationship.
- Replication.
- Biological plausibility.
- Alternative explanations.
- Cessation of exposure.
- Coherence with other knowledge.
- Specificity.
22The randomised controlled trial (RCT)
- To evaluate a specific interventions or
treatment. - Individuals are assigned randomly to an
intervention or control group. This assures
exposure is unbiased and comparability between
groups. - Subjects and medical staff blind to who is
intervention and who is control
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24The Early Trials
- Streptomycin for Pulmonary Tuberculosis 1948.
- Whooping cough vaccine 1951
25Enter Archie Cochrane
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27Archie Cochranes Principles
- The best care available to all.
- The need for a means to determine what was best
treatment. - The importance of rooting out harmful or useless
practice. - The necessity of ascertaining costs and benefits.
28Cochranes solutions
- Health economics
- The randomised controlled trial.
29The legacy
- The Cochrane and Campbell Collaborations.
- Health economics and the Quality Adjusted Life
Year (QALY) - The NHS Centre for Reviews and Dissemination
(University of York). - The Cochrane controlled trials register.
- Fast electronic search engines accessing large
data bases. - Systematic Review and metaanalysis
- NICE
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31Principles of building the evidence base for
excellence
- Cumulation of evidence.
- Methodological rigour by reducing bias by
focusing on internal validity. - Hierarchies of evidence.
32The original hierarchy of evidence
- Systematic reviews and meta analysis.
- RCTs.
- Cohort studies.
- Cross sectional surveys.
- Case reports.
- Expert opinion.
33Applying the evidence based approach beyond
clinical interventions.
- Evidence based public health.
- Where causal relations between the intervention
and the outcome is distal. - Complex interventions in complex settings.
34Evolutionary Trends
. Source The Economist, 12 November 2003.
35- Where X is a brief intervention in primary care
to increase rates of exercise and where Y is
reduced risk of heart attack
36E
K
I
G
X
Y
D
C
B
A
L
J
H
F
37Conceptual framework for public health guidance
Organisational vector
Life-course experience
Health Wellbeing
Environmental vector
Population- wide vector
Individual agency- life worlds-capacity for
action behaviour
Socio-cultural Society vector
38The relationship between interventions and
outcomes
- Long causal chains.
- Importance therefore of developing logic models
to describe the relationship between
interventions and outcomes. - The existing evidence base silent on large tracts
of the logic models. - Key points in the logic model involves evidence
of a type that had never been near an evidence
hierarchy. - Two sets of causation - individual and social in
which the causal chains are equally long
39Practical problems of applying the existing
hierarchy to public health evidence.
- Very few RCTs to go to the top of the hierarchy.
- External validity at least as important as
internal validity. - Need multiple hierarchies of evidence.
- Need to deal with theoretical evidence, models
and propositions.
40Conclusion
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43- First come I my name is Jowett.
- Theres no knowledge but I know it.
- I am master of this college
- What I dont know isnt knowledge.
- The Masque of Balliol
- Revd. H.C. Beeching
44- It is very important not to get stuck in a very
narrow interpretation of what evidence based
medicine means. - Must not fall into the trap of assuming the
evidence speaks for itself.
45Because
- All evidence requires interpretation.
- Absence of evidence does not mean absence of
effect. - Strong evidence of effect may not relate to the
important issue(s) - To learn from what we have observed we must
extrapolate beyond experience to draw out factual
or inductive inferences from what we have
observed to what we have not.
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48NICE
- The National Institute for Health and Clinical
Excellence (NICE) is the independent organisation
in the UK responsible for providing national
guidance to the NHS and the wider public health
community on the promotion of good health and the
prevention and treatment of ill health.