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Dr.F Eslamipour DDS.MS Orthodontist Associated professor Department of Oral Public Health Isfahan University of Medical Science.

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Presentation on theme: "Dr.F Eslamipour DDS.MS Orthodontist Associated professor Department of Oral Public Health Isfahan University of Medical Science."— Presentation transcript:

1 Dr.F Eslamipour DDS.MS Orthodontist Associated professor Department of Oral Public Health Isfahan University of Medical Science

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3 Annually:  20,000 journals  17,000 new books MEDLINE:  4,000 journals  6 Million references  400,000 new entries yearly

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5 Read 19 new articles per day which appear in medical journals 19 x 2 hrs (Critical Appraisal) = 38 hrs per day Davidoff F et al. (1995) EBM; A new journal to help doctors identify the information they need. BMJ 310:1085-86.

6 Time to meet information needs decreasing Amount of Information is rising Knowledge Gap

7  Evidence is anything used to determine or demonstrate the truth of an assertion.  Scientific evidence is evidence which serves to either support or counter a scientific theory or hypothesis.  In scientific research evidence is accumulated through observations of phenomena occur in the natural world, or created as experiments in a laboratory

8  The extent to which one can be confident that an estimate of effect or association is correct (unbiased).

9 Level of Evidence Type of Study 1a Systematic reviews of randomized clinical trials (RCTs) 1b Individual RCTs 2a Systematic reviews of cohort studies 2b Individual cohort studies and low-quality RCTs 3a Systematic reviews of case-controlled studies 3b Individual case-controlled studies 4 Case series and poor-quality cohort and case-control studies 5 Expert opinion based on clinical experience Adapted from: Sackett DL et al. Evidence-Based Medicine: How to Practice and Teach EBM. 2nd ed. Churchill Livingstone; 2000.

10 “Evidence-based medicine is the integration of best research evidence with clinical expertise and patient values” - Sackett & Straus

11  The conscientious,explicit & judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients.  In other words; EBD is sometimes described as doing the right thing,for the right patient, at the right time

12  clinically relevant research  Unbiased research  Reproducible research  often from the basic sciences of medicine  especially from patient centered clinical research

13  We mean the ability to use our clinical skills and past experience to rapidly identify each patient’s unique health state and diagnosis, their individual risks and benefits of potential interventions, and their personal values and expectations.

14  We mean the unique preferences, concerns and expectations each patient brings to a clinical encounter and which must be integrated into clinical decisions if they are to serve the patient.

15  When these three elements are integrated, clinicians and patients form a diagnostic and therapeutic alliance which optimizes clinical outcomes and quality of life

16 Clinical Expertise Research Evidence Patient Preferences EBD

17 Experiences Pathophysiology, references, … Patient value

18 1. Clinical skills & experience 2. Integrating evidence with patient values

19 EBPtraditional practice Uses best evidence availableUnclear basis of evidence Systematic appraisal of quality of evidence Unclear or absent appraisal of quality of evidence More objective,transparent & less biased More subjective,opaque & biased Greater acceptance of uncertainty Greater tendency to black & white conclusion

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21 1. Treatments & diagnostic test are being used at a time when their effectiveness is approved 2. EBD prevent using ineffective treatment methods, so it will probably decrease charges

22 3. It help us updating our knowledge continuously instead of reading lots of irrelevancy & unreliable literature, so time saving. 4. It helps policy makers through development of clinical guidelines', providing them with enough documents & evidence

23 5. Instead of teaching students current standard treatment method, it teach them how to find the best current therapy for their disease 6. EBM promote evidence instead of persons authority 7. It decreases medical errors

24  First, the need to develop new skills in searching and critical appraisal can be daunting, although (as we pointed out above) evidence-based care can still be applied if only the former has been mastered and directed toward pre-appraised resources

25  Second, busy clinicians have limited time to master and apply these new skills, and the resources required for instant access to evidence are often woefully inadequate in clinical setting.

26 1. Ask your clinical question 2. Search your literature for answer 3. Appraise the retrieved documents 4. Apply your findings 5. Evaluate the performance

27  Problem/patient  Intervention  Comparison  Outcome

28  P: moderate / heavy smokers  I: bopropion  C: nicotine replacement therapy  O: quit rates adverse effects example

29  The question is too specific  Patient with multiple problems

30  Articles  Textbooks & literature reviews  Systematic reviews  Electronic database  Hand searching

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