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Bandolier's Little Book of Making Sense of the Medical Evidence
Andrew Moore and Henry McQuay
440 pages
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158 line illustrations and 6 black and white images
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180x100mm
978-0-19-856604-5
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Flexicovers
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06 July 2006
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- A simple, practical guide which will help the reader to make sense of evidence in the healthcare setting
- An excellent tool to help the reader avoid being misled by faulty evidence
- Written by the authors of the hugely successful 'Bandolier's Little Book of Pain'
This easy to read pocketbook, written by world leaders in the field of evidence-based pain treatments, acts as a simple guide for people who wish to make sense of evidence in a healthcare setting and who want to avoid being misled by faulty evidence.
It provides practical guidelines on how to make sense of and interpret the evidence that is available, with information on how to avoid straying beyond evidence into conjecture, supposition, and wishful thinking. It covers size, trial design, harm as well as benefit, and health economics and management evidence. 'Bandolier's Little Book of Making Sense of the
Medical Evidence' has not been written as a comprehensive manual for those who want to do a systematic review or a meta-analysis, nor as a statistical or methodological textbook for students. Its origins lie in lectures for medical students, healthcare professionals from a variety of settings, and journalists. This book is a summary of the tools that Bandolier uses to assess evidence, to be able to distinguish good evidence from bad. It will be an invaluable resource for university course and GP tutors, family doctors, hospital consultants involved in research, pharmacists, and anyone interested in evidence-based health care.Readership: University course and GP tutors, family doctors, hospital consultants
involved in research, nurses, pharmacists, and anyone interested in evidence-based health care.
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Andrew Moore, Chief Editor Bandolier, Oxford, UK, and Henry McQuay, Professor of Pain Relief, University of Oxford, UK
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"...definitely recommended not only to those who read medical literature, but to researchers as well...this book will be of use to medical students, trainees and specialists, and should be available in every department of anaesthesia." - British Journal of Anaesthesia "[The book] does exactly what it says on the tin. It is divided into seven sections...and as such it is very easy to navigate...it is well-presented with a large number of clear diagrams and graphs that serve to break up, as well as illustrate, the text...[it] enables healthcare professionals to make sense, quickly and easily, of the evidence with which they are presented...[and] it is just as accessible to anyone outside of the healthcare profession who might wish
to consult it...essential for healthcare workers and medical journalists." - Sense About Science "The target audience is healthcare professionals wanting to use the best evidence in practice. The authors are widely known for evidence-based pain treatment...[the book] should benefit the target audience. It is a very small, compact book packed with the essential information for assessing scientific evidence." - Doody's Notes
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Introduction
1: Evidence-based medicine
2: Clinical trial fundamentals
3: Observational studies
4: Diagnostic testing fundamentals
5: Adverse events: thinking and definitions
6: Health economics and management
7: Things that don't fit easily
8: Glossary
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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