Users' Guides to the Medical Literature: A Manual for Evidence-Based Clinical Practice, Second Edition

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McGraw Hill Professional, Mar 1, 2008 - Medical - 860 pages

The #1 guide to the principles and clinical applications of evidence-based medicine has just gotten better!

A Doody's Core Title ESSENTIAL PURCHASE for 2011!

No other resource helps you to put key evidence-based medicine protocols into daily clinical practice better than Users' Guides to the Medical Literature.

An instant classic in its first edition, this detailed, yet highly readable reference demystifies the statistical, analytical, and clinical principles of evidence-based medicine, giving you a hands-on, practical resource that no other text can match.

Here, you'll learn how to distinguish solid medical evidence from poor medical evidence, devise the best search strategies for each clinical question, critically appraise the medical literature, and optimally tailor evidence-based medicine for each patient. The new second edition of this landmark resource is now completely revised and refreshed throughout, with expanded coverage of both basic and advanced issues in using evidence-based medicine in clinical practice.

FEATURES:

  • Completely revised and updated to reflect the enormous expansion in medical research and evidence-based resources since the first edition
  • Innovative organization guides you from the fundamentals of using the medical literature to the more advanced strategies and skills for use in every day patient care situations
  • Abundant and current real-world examples drawn from the medical literature are woven throughout, and include important related principles and pitfalls in using medical literature in patient care decisions
  • Practical focus on the key issues in evidence-based practice: What are the results? Are the results valid? How to I apply to results to the care of my patients?
  • More than 60 internationally recognized editors and contributors from the U.S., Canada, South America, Europe, and Asia -- the best of the best in the discipline
  • NEW coverage on how to:
    --Avoid being misled by biased presentations of research findings
    --Interpret the significance of clinical trials that are discontinued early
    --Influence clinician behavior to improve patient care
    --Apply key strategies for teaching evidence-based medicine
  • Also look for JAMAevidence.com, a new interactive database for the best practice of evidence based medicine.
  • From inside the book

    Contents

    The Foundations
    1
    Therapy
    65
    Harm Observational Studies
    361
    Copyright

    6 other sections not shown

    Other editions - View all

    Common terms and phrases

    About the author (2008)

    Gordon Guyatt, MD, MSc
    Departments of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics and Medicine
    Faculty of Health Sciences
    McMaster University
    Hamilton, Ontario

    Drummond Rennie, MD
    JAMA, Chicago, IL
    Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies
    University of California, San Francisco
    San Francisco, CA

    Maureen O. Meade, MD, FRCPC, MSc
    Departments of Medicine and Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics
    Faculty of Health Sciences
    McMaster University
    Hamilton, Ontario

    Deborah J. Cook, MD, MSc
    Department of Medicine and Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics
    Faculty of Health Sciences
    McMaster University
    Hamilton, Ontario

    Bibliographic information