Background: The Informed Health Choices (IHC) Key Concepts are principles for evaluating the trustworthiness of claims about treatment effects. The Key Concepts provide a framework for developing learning-resources to help people use the concepts when treatment claims are made, and when they make health choices. Objective: To compare the framework provided by the IHC Key Concepts to other frameworks intended to promote critical thinking about treatment (intervention) claims and choices. Methods: We identified relevant frameworks from reviews of frameworks, searching Google Scholar, citation searches, and contact with key informants. We included frameworks intended to provide a structure for teaching or learning to think critically about the...
BACKGROUND: The DECIDE framework was developed to support evidence-informed health system decisions ...
Evidence-informed health care decisions and recommendations need to be made systematically and trans...
Background: Many people find it difficult to make decisions about what to believe or do regarding “h...
We present here a plan for reviewing frameworks for critical thinking. The findings of this review w...
Many claims about the effects of treatments, though well intentioned, are wrong. Indeed, they are so...
Background: The Informed Health Choices (IHC) Key Concepts are standards for judgement, or principle...
The Informed Health Choices (IHC) Key Concepts serve as the basis for developing learning resources ...
Background: The Informed Health Choices (IHC) Key Concepts are standards for judgement, or principle...
There are endless claims about treatments in the mass media, advertisements, and everyday personal c...
Objective: To describe a framework for people making and using evidence-informed health system and p...
About this cross-field framework In late 2018, Iain Chalmers, Andy Oxman, and others from the Infor...
Background: People frequently make decisions about what can improve their health. They do this based...
Funding: Work on this article has been partially funded by the European Commission FP7 Program (gran...
In late 2018, Iain Chalmers, Andy Oxman and others from the Informed Health Choices team convened a ...
The Informed Health Choices (IHC) Key Concepts are principles for thinking critically about healthca...
BACKGROUND: The DECIDE framework was developed to support evidence-informed health system decisions ...
Evidence-informed health care decisions and recommendations need to be made systematically and trans...
Background: Many people find it difficult to make decisions about what to believe or do regarding “h...
We present here a plan for reviewing frameworks for critical thinking. The findings of this review w...
Many claims about the effects of treatments, though well intentioned, are wrong. Indeed, they are so...
Background: The Informed Health Choices (IHC) Key Concepts are standards for judgement, or principle...
The Informed Health Choices (IHC) Key Concepts serve as the basis for developing learning resources ...
Background: The Informed Health Choices (IHC) Key Concepts are standards for judgement, or principle...
There are endless claims about treatments in the mass media, advertisements, and everyday personal c...
Objective: To describe a framework for people making and using evidence-informed health system and p...
About this cross-field framework In late 2018, Iain Chalmers, Andy Oxman, and others from the Infor...
Background: People frequently make decisions about what can improve their health. They do this based...
Funding: Work on this article has been partially funded by the European Commission FP7 Program (gran...
In late 2018, Iain Chalmers, Andy Oxman and others from the Informed Health Choices team convened a ...
The Informed Health Choices (IHC) Key Concepts are principles for thinking critically about healthca...
BACKGROUND: The DECIDE framework was developed to support evidence-informed health system decisions ...
Evidence-informed health care decisions and recommendations need to be made systematically and trans...
Background: Many people find it difficult to make decisions about what to believe or do regarding “h...