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Evidence-based Practice for Hinari Users Part A (Advanced Course Module 6)

Evidence-based Practice for Hinari Users Part A (Advanced Course Module 6). Table of Contents – Part A. Evidence & EBM definitions 5 step EBM process Hinari Resources (partial) Cochrane Library Joanna Briggs Institute Resources. What is EBP?.

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Evidence-based Practice for Hinari Users Part A (Advanced Course Module 6)

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  1. Evidence-based Practice for Hinari Users Part A(Advanced Course Module 6)

  2. Table of Contents – Part A • Evidence & EBM definitions • 5 step EBM process • Hinari Resources (partial) • Cochrane Library • Joanna Briggs Institute Resources

  3. What is EBP? The integration of best evidence* from current research, patient preferences and values, and clinical expertise to clinical questions in a timely fashion (Sackett, 2000). EBP *Best available evidence is: consistent research evidence with high quality and quantity

  4. Why EBP? • Improve care • To bridge the gap between research & practice • “Kill as few patients as possible” (O. London) • new treatment • fewer side effects • cheaper or less invasive • resistance to existing therapies, etc. • Keep knowledge and skills current (continuing education) • To save time to find the best information

  5. What are some Barriers for EBP? • Time, effort & skills needed • Access to evidence • Overuse, underuse, misuse of evidence • Poor decision making • Environment not supportive of EBP • Intimidation by senior clinicians

  6. How does EBP help? A patient comes to a clinic with a fresh dog bite. It looks clean and the nurse and patient wonder if prophylactic antibiotics are necessary. The nurse searches PubMed and found a meta analysis indicating that the average infection rate for dog bites was 14% and that antibiotics halved this risk to 7%. • For every 100 people with dog bites, treatment with antibiotics will save 7 from infection • Treating 14 (NNT) people with dog bites will prevent 1 infection • You explain these numbers to the patient along with possible consequences and patient decides not to take antibiotics. • On a follow up visit you find out that he did not get infected. Glasziou P, Del Mar C, Salisbury J. EBP Workbook, 2nd. ed. BMJ Books, 2007.

  7. The 5 Step EBP Process 1. ASK: Formulate an answerable clinical question 2. ACCESS: Track down the best Evidence 3. APPRAISE: Appraise the evidence for its validity and usefulness 4. APPLY: Integrate the results with your clinical expertise and your patient values/local conditions 5. ASSESS: Evaluate the effectiveness of the process

  8. Ask Step 1: ASK (questions, PICO) a focused (answerable) clinical question Background Questions Foreground Questions Specific questions - patient INTERVENTION/PREVENTION ETIOLOGY, RISK DIAGNOSIS PROGNOSIS Information Resources journal articles synopses of articles systematic reviews answer specific questions best medication to reduce blood pressure • General questions - disorder • What is the disorder? • What causes it? • How does it manifest? • Treatment options? • Information Resources • books • guidelines (best practice) • narrative reviews • general overview of a topic • treatment of heart disease

  9. Ask Step 1: ASK PICO Format P = Patient, population or problem I = Intervention C = Comparison intervention (optional) O = Outcome

  10. Why should I use PICO? • define problem - clarify it in your own mind • identify concepts/terms for searching • ask patient centered questions: • treatment of Pneumococcal Pneumonia SHOULD be different for: • Terminal Cancer Patient • Young, mother of 2 children

  11. Example: Intervention Questions • A 54 year old male patient was diagnosed with intermediate grade prostate cancer and wants to know whether to get a radical prostatectomy or radiation treatment. He is concerned about the risk of impotence. • Identify the 4 PICO components

  12. Formulate the Clinical Question • PICO P (patient) - 54 year old male / prostate cancer I (intervention) - radical prostatectomy C (comparison intervention) - radiation treatment O (outcome) -reduce risk of impotence • Focused clinical questionIn 54 year old male patients with intermediate grade prostate cancer, is radical prostatectomy more effective compared to radiation treatment in reducing the risk of impotence?

  13. Formulate the Clinical Question • PICOP (patient) - 30 year old male with a fresh dog bite I (intervention) – prophylactic antibiotics C (comparison intervention) – clean and bandage; no antibiotics O (outcome) - reduce risk of infection • Focused clinical questionIn 30 year old male patients with a fresh dog bite, is prophylactic antibiotics more effective then cleaning & bandaging the would in reducing the risk of infection? • Deconstruct your PICO Keywords: dog OR animal* bite* antibiotics infection* Limiter: Adult, age 18 – 45 English Only

  14. Templates for EBP Questions • For a therapy: In adult patients w/total hip replacements (P), what is the effect of PCA pain Medication (I) on postoperative pain(O) compared with prn IM pain Medication(C)? • For etiology: Are adult males(P) who have a vasectomy (I) at an increased (Increased/decreased) risk for/oftesticular cancer(O) compared with adult males (P) with/without no vasectomy(C)? • Diagnosis or diagnostic test: Are (is) mammogram(I) more accurate in diagnosing breast cancer(P) compared with clinical breast exam(C) for earlier diagnosis of breast cancer(O)? • Prevention: For women under the age of 60(P) does the use of low-dose aspirin(I) reduce the future risk of stroke (O) compared with none (C)? • Prognosis: Does smoking education(I) influence young people not to smoke(O) in patients who have high risk of smoking(P)? Melnyk B. & Fineout-Overholt E. (2005). Evidence-based practice in nursing & healthcare. New York: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

  15. EBP Step 2: ACCESS (studies, hierarchies)Track Down the Best Evidence Access Start “hunting” from the best resource: match your question to the best medical information resource for this question.

  16. Hierarchy of EvidenceResearch Studies synthesis experimental observational primary literature – comes directly from a study secondary literature– combines findings from primary literature

  17. Hierarchy of Evidence - Medical Literatureaccess at the level that will give you the best evidence Track Down Filtered & Critically Appraised Most clinically relevant (at the top) Least clinically relevant (at the bottom) Expert Opinion and Not Filtered Background info.

  18. Types of EBM resources: Pre-appraised literature vs. Non-appraised literature* • Pre-appraised literature uses an explicit review process – by experts - to find and appraise evidence; to provide clinicians with the best evidence, often at the point of care (evidence summaries, journals that summarize research, clinical practice guidelines). https://learn.maricopa.edu/courses/804760/pages/understanding-pre-appraised-sources?module_item_id=5387411; 23 September 2016 • Non-appraised or primary sources (individual research articles) answer very specific questions and provide the most recent data. One must be able to search efficiently and critically appraise the information. https://www.pdqa.gov.hk/english/ebeplatform/ebm/ebm_bestevid.php 23 September 2016 *Regardless of category, sources must be appraised by the user

  19. Select sources to find primary studies: Filtered (pre-appraised) or Not-filtered (not appraised)? Not-filtered (not-appraised) sources: Medline (PubMed), Scopus, Google/Scholar... Filtered (appraised) sources: Cochrane Library, Joanna Briggs… • Create comprehensive searches • Conduct systematic reviews • Conduct synonym searching using thesauri • Set up and distribute alerts • Limit to populations & publication types • ‘Not all clinicians will need or want to do lit searches and clinical appraisal’ • Save Time • Ask the experts • Use quality research only • Use at the point of care

  20. Hierarchy of Evidence – Question Type A well designed systematic review of RCTS (randomized controlled trials) is best as it is least biased therefore more valid. After that, start with the least biased study type for the question.

  21. ‘Dog Bite’ Example: Nurse Search • The nurse searches PubMed and found a meta analysis indicating that the average infection rate for dog bites was 14% and that antibiotics halved this risk to 7%. • For every 100 people with dog bites, treatment with antibiotics will save 7 from infection • Treating 14 (NNT) people with dog bites will prevent 1 infection

  22. EBP Step 3:Appraise (validity, impact): • Appraisal principles (primary and secondary research) • Does PICO of the study match my PICO question? • validity • internal validity – methods • How well was the study done? Is it biased? • external validity • generalizability • impact • Does it matter to your patient? • GATE Appraisal Form:https://www.fmhs.auckland.ac.nz/en/soph/about/our-departments/epidemiology-and-biostatistics/research/epiq/2015-evidence-based-practice-and-cats.html • University of Oxford’s Center of EBM:http://www.cebm.net/index.aspx?o=1157 • Evaluating the Evidence section in the EBM tutorial at: http://www.hsl.unc.edu/Services/Tutorials/ebm/welcome.htm Appraise

  23. EBP Step 4: APPLY (patient, setting): Integrate the results with your clinicalexpertise and your patient values • Patient • Is my patient similar enough that the results of the study apply? • Will the potential benefits outweigh the potential harms of treatment ? • What does my patient think? What are his cultural beliefs? • Setting • Is the intervention feasible in my settings? • What alternatives are available? Apply

  24. ‘Dog Bite’ Example: Application/Recommendation/Decision • You explain these numbers to the patient along with possible consequences • Probability of infection, based on age, health, etc, is low. • But leaves the decision to the patient. • Patient decides not to take antibiotics.

  25. EBP Step 5: ASSESS (patient, yourself)Evaluate the effectiveness of the process. Assess • Am I asking questions? • Am I writing down my information needs? • How is my searching going? Am I becoming more efficient? • What is my success rate in the EBM steps? • Am I periodically syncing (checking) my skills and knowledge with new developments? • Teach others EBP skills • Keep a record of your questions

  26. ‘Dog Bite’ Example: Follow Up • On a follow up visit you find out that he did not get infected. • Keep records

  27. To learn more about EBM, go to the online tutorial Introduction to Evidence-Based Medicine. Developed by Duke University Medical Center Library and Health Sciences Library/University of North Carolina/Chapel Hill. http://guides.mclibrary.duke.edu/ebmtutorial

  28. SUNY Downstate also provides a comprehensive online tutorial about EBM. http://library.downstate.edu/EBM2/contents.htm Case Series / Reports

  29. Hinari Resources • Cochrane Library – filtered • Joanna Briggs Institute Resources - filtered

  30. The Cochrane Library by The Cochrane Collaboration • The Cochrane Collaboration (http://www.cochrane.org/) • Independent non-for-profit international collaboration • Reviews are among the studies of highest scientific evidence • Minimum Bias: Evidence is included/excluded on the basis of explicit quality criteria; A panel of experts reviews the evidence, peer-reviewed, dynamic (updated regularly) • Reviews involve exhaustive searches for all RCT, both published and unpublished, on a particular topic • Abstracts searchable for free on the Internet; • Some of Cochrane Library resources searchable in PubMed 1995-

  31. The Cochrane Library Content • Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (CDSR) • Cochrane Reviews & Protocols primarily on interventions • Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects (DARE) • Structured abstracts on other reviews also on diagnosis, prevention, rehabilitation, screening (not available in CDSR or Medline) • Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) • The largest single source of RCTs from all over the world (from Medline, Embase, conference proceedings, and more) • Cochrane Methodology Register (CMR) - Methods Studies • Health Technology Assessment Database (HTA) – Technology Assessments • NHS Economic Evaluation Database (NHSEED)- Economic Evaluations

  32. From the Hinari Content page, open the Reference sources list to access Cochrane Library and other EBM resources.

  33. From the Reference Sources menu, we now will click on the Cochrane Library link. The Cochrane Library contains high-quality, independent evidence including reliable evidence from Cochrane and other systematic reviews and clinical trials. It is published by John Wiley.

  34. The initial page of this site has a title, abstract or keyword option Search engine. You also have various options in Cochrane Reviews to Browse by Topic and Browse by Review Group Open the Browse by CDSR Notice the More Resources List.

  35. Searching the Cochrane Library • Select Search manager • Search for PICO terms one at a time • Combine synonyms with OR • Combine different terms with AND • You retrieved 20 results • Scroll down to view results • Select Search manager • Search for PICO terms one at a time • Combine synonyms with OR • Combine different terms with AND • You retrieved 20 results • Scroll down to view results

  36. Displaying Results in the Cochrane Library All results CDSR (default) DARE CENTRAL • Search all Cochrane databases at once • Results from CDSR display as default • Notice results from DARE, CENTRAL, etc. • Systematic reviews are available • Click on 1st one to view • If not satisfied view reviews from DARE or Randomized Control Trials from CENTRAL

  37. Viewing Results in the Cochrane Library Note that you can download the PDF.

  38. Review Key Information

  39. Review Abstract to see if your PICO matches review’s criteria

  40. View Main Results and Conclusions

  41. Plain Language Summary for Your Patient

  42. Viewing Randomized Control Trials from CENTRAL

  43. From the Cochrane Reviews drop down menu open Browse by Topic.

  44. From the extensive Browse by Topic list,you have another option for locating subject- specific material.

  45. JBI Database of Systematic Reviews and Implementation Reports (JBI) JBI resources are primarily found through the Ovid platform, however, when it is feasible, some of the Protocols will be published through PROSPERO which is Open Access. Besides Systematic Reviews, JBI publishes: Best Practice Information Sheets Consumer Information Sheets Evidence Summaries Recommended Practices Systematic Review Protocols Systematic Reviews and Technical Reports

  46. Two Methods for Searching JBI:The first is article searching No advanced Search Best bet when you have an article title/volume/issue Retrieval Path Click on J from the Journals Collection Find the JBI Database of Systematic Reviews and Implementation Reports Note: There are two options. Choose the year range that is appropriate for your citation.

  47. JBI Database of Systematic Reviews and Implementation Reports: Article Searching Note the Article searching options.

  48. Article Searching through JBI Database Search the journal issue list Advanced Search The Advanced Search is a simple title, author, etc search. • Using Date, Volume, issue and page number Keyword/subject search; generally used when you have no citation available; this method searches 2003 to present; from volume 1/issue 1

  49. Open the Joanna Briggs Institute EBP Database from the Browse databases list -another option for locating subject- specific material.

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