Evidence-based medicine is the application of scientific evidence to clinical practice. This article discusses the difficulties of applying global evidence ("average effects" measured as population means) to local problems (individual patients or groups who might depart from the population average). It argues that the benefit or harm of most treatments in clinical trials can be misleading and fail to reveal the potentially complex mixture of substantial benefits for some, little benefit for many, and harm for a few. Heterogeneity of treatment effects reflects patient diversity in risk of disease, responsiveness to treatment, vulnerability to adverse effects, and utility for different outcomes. Recognizing these factors, researchers can desi...
ABSTRACT Evidenced-based medicine views random-assignment clinical trials as the gold standard of ev...
Evidence-based medicine (EBM) was announced in the early 1990s as a 'new paradigm' for improving pat...
Background: Recent evidence suggests that there is often substantial variation in the benefits and h...
BackgroundSome patients will experience more or less benefit from treatment than the averages report...
Mounting evidence suggests that there is frequently considerable variation in the risk of the outcom...
Mounting evidence suggests that there is frequently considerable variation in the risk of the outcom...
Do the effects of interventions vary across patient and community subgroups based on health needs, v...
A relevant problem in meta-analysis concerns the possible heterogeneity between trial results. If a ...
Evidence-based medicine (EBM) claims to provide gold-standard methods based on group and population ...
One of the unfortunate side consequences of evidence-based medicine (EBM) is that sometimes there is...
This paper reviews methods that can be used to assess the impact of medicine use on population healt...
International audienceBACKGROUND:This article corresponds to a literature review and analyze how het...
A Google Scholar search using the term “evidence based medicine” identifies more than 1.8 million pa...
The goal of a standard clinical study is to assess the mean or median effectiveness and side effects...
The goal of a meta-analysis is not only to synthesize the information of selected studies, estimate ...
ABSTRACT Evidenced-based medicine views random-assignment clinical trials as the gold standard of ev...
Evidence-based medicine (EBM) was announced in the early 1990s as a 'new paradigm' for improving pat...
Background: Recent evidence suggests that there is often substantial variation in the benefits and h...
BackgroundSome patients will experience more or less benefit from treatment than the averages report...
Mounting evidence suggests that there is frequently considerable variation in the risk of the outcom...
Mounting evidence suggests that there is frequently considerable variation in the risk of the outcom...
Do the effects of interventions vary across patient and community subgroups based on health needs, v...
A relevant problem in meta-analysis concerns the possible heterogeneity between trial results. If a ...
Evidence-based medicine (EBM) claims to provide gold-standard methods based on group and population ...
One of the unfortunate side consequences of evidence-based medicine (EBM) is that sometimes there is...
This paper reviews methods that can be used to assess the impact of medicine use on population healt...
International audienceBACKGROUND:This article corresponds to a literature review and analyze how het...
A Google Scholar search using the term “evidence based medicine” identifies more than 1.8 million pa...
The goal of a standard clinical study is to assess the mean or median effectiveness and side effects...
The goal of a meta-analysis is not only to synthesize the information of selected studies, estimate ...
ABSTRACT Evidenced-based medicine views random-assignment clinical trials as the gold standard of ev...
Evidence-based medicine (EBM) was announced in the early 1990s as a 'new paradigm' for improving pat...
Background: Recent evidence suggests that there is often substantial variation in the benefits and h...