Title: Evaluating Medical and Public Health Publications
1Evaluating Medical and Public Health Publications
- PH 530
- Biostatistics
- University of Tennessee
- Public Health Program
- Paula Zemel, PhD
2 Tips for using this presentation
- Read the goal and objectives.
- Review the presentation at your own pace.
- Read Chapter 15 in the text.
- Complete the Practically Speaking activities.
- Review several journals in public health and/or
your content area.
3 Tips for using this presentation, cont.
- Look for research on the Internet. Apply
criteria to distinguish credible from
non-credible sources. - Select a primary research article from a
peer-reviewed health journal in an area of
interest. - Make sure the statistics used in the article
include at least one inferential statistic
included in class. - Use guidelines in Class Notes to write your
critique.
4Goal and Objectives
- Goal Critically read and evaluate research
reports in public health - Objectives
- Identify major components of research reports.
- Evaluate information presented in sections of
research reports. - Critique published reports of research.
- Apply findings of published research to public
health practice.
5Types of Research Reported
- Primary
- original report of planned research
- Secondary
- reanalysis of data (sometimes called post-hoc
assessment - evaluation of large data sets often in the public
domain - e.g. National Health and Nutrition Examination
Study (NHANES-3) survey
6Types of Research Reported, cont.
- Secondary Research, cont.
- Meta-analysis
- technique used to combine analyze results of
several studies - Literature Reviews
- author(s) review and interpret published studies.
7Get to the Research Source
- Primary sources of research
- includes original research
- communicated by principal investigators of
project - addresses methods and results
- methodology is complete and clear enough to be
reproduced
8Get to the Research Source
- Primary sources of research
- manuscript submission process is described in
journal, usually in one issue/year - review process provides more assurance of quality
- research generally has not been published
elsewhere - standards and guidelines for electronic
publications are in development
9Get to the Research Source
- Where to find primary research?
- Peer-reviewed journals
- Peer-reviewed abstracts from professional
meetings - Scientific reports (print and electronic) from
symposia - Government reports (print and electronic)
10Get to the Research Source
- Where to find primary research?
- Peer-reviewed journals
- also called refereed journals
- manuscripts are evaluated by panel of reviewers
before accepted for publication - editor(s), editorial board and ad hoc reviewers
are usually listed in journal
11 Practically Speaking
- Review a current journal in your field.
- What are the guidelines for authors?
- Does it use a peer-review process?
- How does it identify...
- Research articles?
- Review articles?
- Feature articles?
- Editorial or opinion articles?
- Review a research resource on the Internet. Were
similar methods used to assure quality?
12Evaluating Research in Public Health
- In order to critique a research article, first
review the anatomy of a journal article - Title, Author(s), Key words
- Abstract
- Introduction
- Methods
- Results
- Discussion/Conclusion
- References
13Title, Author(s), Key words
- Now that you have identified an article that
presents results of primary research, review the
title, authors and key words. - Do the key words match your areas of interest?
- Does the title suggest the article might contain
information useful to your area of practice? - Who are the authors? Do the authors or their
affiliations suggest they are writing in their
area of expertise?
14Abstract
- Read the abstract to decide if you should read
the entire article. - Abstract should identify the focus of the
article. - Two types of abstracts
- Structured A structured abstract follows a
standard format organized by subheadings.
Structured abstracts make it easier to evaluate
an article. - Unstructured A maximum number of words may be
specified for author, but the format is not
specified. Abstract provides a summary of the
article, but may be difficult to compare to other
articles.
15Abstract
- The abstract should help you further decide if
you should read the article - If the study is properly designed and analyzed,
are the results important and worth knowing
about? - If the results are statistically significant, are
they clinically worth knowing about?
16 Practically Speaking
- Searching by computer
- Know the databases you can search
- Use the thesaurus to make sure you are using the
right terms and that they are not too broad or
too narrow - Review the title, authors, keywords and abstract
to determine if the article meets your needs - On the internet, a search engine currently
accesses about 1/3 of all sourcesuse a search
engine that searches many others, such as
www.search.com if you want a broader search - Evaluate sources carefully!
17Introduction
- Addresses what research has been performed in the
area and how this study is different. - The last paragraph or sentence usually includes
the purpose of the study. - The lack of a clearly stated research question is
the most common reason manuscripts are rejected
in health research.
18Introduction
- A brief literature review should provide enough
background information to place the paper in its
proper context - What is the general background?
- Why does this study need to be done?
- The literature review is written at an
appropriate level for the intended audience-not
at too high (assuming too much prior knowledge)
or too low (giving too much basic information).
19 Practically Speaking
- Review the abstract and introduction of a
research article in public health. - What type of abstract was included?
- Who is the intended audience? Is the literature
review appropriately targeted for the intended
audience? - Is the difference between this study and others
in the literature clear? We planned this study
because no one had done this.. is not sufficient
justification... - Do you have a clear understanding of the purpose
and research question? If not, what could the
authors add to clarify the purpose/research
question?
20Methods
- Details how the study was done
- research design and hypotheses
- reliability and validity of new methods
- outcome measures and assessment criteria
- subjects
- procedures
- statistics
21Methods
- Subjects
- describe inclusion and exclusion criteria for
subjects - number? age? Gender? Preexisting conditions?
Medication use? Pregnancy? How was informed
consent obtained? What was the sampled
population? Sampling plan? Refusals?
Withdrawals? Retention or response rate?
Unanticipated occurrences or outcomes?
22Methods
- Procedures
- Should be clear enough to replicate study
- How was study design implemented?
- Are methods referenced or validated?
- How were potential forms of bias minimized?
- (eg observer blias, sampling bias, selection
bias, response bias, dropout bias, memory bias,
participant bias?)
23Methods
- Procedures
- How are data quality ensured?
- Lab assays?
- Data entry?
- Duplicate collection on random sample for
measured with questionable reliability? - Triangulation (3 measures that are hypothesized
to vary in the a systematic way)
24Methods
- Procedures
- Statistical methods
- should be described in enough detail so the
reader knows that methods were appropriate and
how data were analyzed - what descriptive and/or inferential statistics
were used?
25 Practically Speaking
- Use the flowcharts in your text to check the
authors use of statistics - What are the outcome measures?
- What type of data does each represent? (Nominal?
Ordinal? Numerical? - Are research questions addressing
- differences between groups?
- Associations? Predictions?
- Continue to follow the flowchart to check
assumptions and determine if the test used was
appropriate!
26Resultsjust the facts!
- Should relate to research questions and purpose
of study - Results should include meaningful descriptive
statistics, results of inferential statistics
reported with p-values or confidence levels - tables and graphs to present data clearly
- interpretation of results and/or discussion of
what they mean do not belong in the results
section
27Discussion/Conclusion
- Should address
- research questionsaccept or refute?
- Are findings consistent with other published
results in the area? Why or why not? - Conclusionwhats it all about
- Conclusions should not reach beyond the data.
28Discussion/Conclusion
- What are shortcomings, what went wrong with the
study, what would authors have done differently?
(the best laid plans - Suggestions for future research, based on
results? What new questions or issues do results
raise? - How can results be applied to public health
practice? - What should practitioners continue to do or do
differently as a result of this research?
29References
- Are references appropriate? Complete? Timely?
- Do references address primary or secondary
research? - What style does journal use? If the guidelines
for authors do not address a particular type of
reference, what stylebook do they use (e.g. APA,
Index Medicus, MLA)
30Overall Evaluation
- What is your overall critique of the article?
- What do the tables and figures add to the
manuscript? - Is this research project creative? Can results
of this research path eventually make an
important contribution to health? - Is the principle author someone you could see as
a mentor? - Other comments? questions raised
- as a result of reading this article?
31 Practically Speaking
- How can this article be applied to your graduate
work now? Next semester or next year? - Did this article have an impact on you, either
negatively or positively? - Will you do anything differently as a result of
reading this article?