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Our journal is interested in publishing critical appraisals that describe the use of clinical research in the decision making process for a specific aspect ...
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This document is available on the Clinical Research in Practice: Journal of Team Hippocrates website, under “Author Instructions.” Original by Tim Caldwell. Guidelines for Writing and Reviewing a Critical Appraisal From the Editors of Clinical Research in Practice: The Journal of Team Hippocrates. Our journal is interested in publishing critical appraisals that describe the use of clinical research in the decision making process for a specific aspect of the care of one patient. Decision making must include the context of care—social determinants that affect the recommendations. It is an exercise in applied clinical decision-making. Health-policy and more general decision- making are outside the scope of a critical appraisal manuscript. The author, editor and reviewers all have the same goal – to produce a valid, insightful and well-written critical appraisal that walks the reader through the entire clinical decision making process. The end product should enable the reader to:
This document is available on the Clinical Research in Practice: Journal of Team Hippocrates website, under “Author Instructions.” Original by Tim Caldwell. appropriate, reading/critiquing the chosen paper and applying the conclusion to the patient. This will improve the learning experience for all involved. MANUSCRIPT: __________ PAPER: ______________________________________________________________________ When approaching a critical appraisal manuscript there are many factors that need consideration before a manuscript is ready for publication. A stepwise approach, we find, works well. The following outlines the required sections in each critical appraisal (1- 8 ). The order of the sections is closely related to the process of clinical decision making using clinical research; this is intentional. Each section includes tips for writing, as well as some points that should almost always appear in a thorough critical appraisal. These “required” points are indicated in bold, and preceded with a checkbox to assist with completeness. However, checking all the boxes does not guarantee suitability for publication. The author, editor and reviewers should use whatever additional methods they feel are appropriate.
a. Do not use the title of the research paper.
c. Emphasize the clinical utility of the research paper.
a. The clinical context should be based on an actual patient care situation. b. The description of the patient should include enough detail to formulate the clinical question.
should be described.
of the patient. Health decisions and health care occur within a social context. This journal is seeking to understand how evidence is deployed in social settings related to the individual patient circumstances. e. Provide enough clinical detail for readers to determine if the clinical research paper chosen can be applied to this particular patient care situation. Be mindful of inclusion and exclusion criteria and generalizability. These aspects of the clinical case help integrate the different sections of the manuscript described below.
This document is available on the Clinical Research in Practice: Journal of Team Hippocrates website, under “Author Instructions.” Original by Tim Caldwell.
and meta-analyses is an appropriate additional step in finding primary research. iii. The search can be refined until it results in a reasonable number of articles. We find about 200 papers is doable. One can quickly read the titles to decide which articles might be primary research. A reading of the abstract should confirm. iv. When searching Pubmed, the following search modifiers are helpful:
This document is available on the Clinical Research in Practice: Journal of Team Hippocrates website, under “Author Instructions.” Original by Tim Caldwell.
methods of the chosen article are superior to other articles for answering this question. i. A brief PICO description of the most relevant articles is a good approach for therapeutic trials.
issue is controversial. The author should do this by comparing validity of research papers found in the search. The validity of research papers is based on the research methodology and the risk of bias that comes from the methodology. It does not come from the results. They should appraise the article that is most likely to guide clinical care.
authors of the original research. Our authors must utilize their critical thinking skills.
This document is available on the Clinical Research in Practice: Journal of Team Hippocrates website, under “Author Instructions.” Original by Tim Caldwell.
randomized? If so, this is an intention-to-treat analysis , which is stronger. If not, it is likely a per-protocol analysis.
and study personnel blinded? Was this blinding sufficient? Was there anything in the study protocol that may have allowed any party to guess what group they were allocated to?
equally?
patients who are started on that therapy typically because they are sicker or their disease is more poorly controlled? i. Critical appraisal questions related to a diagnostic article:
assessing the diagnostic test aware of the result of the gold standard beforehand?
patients passed, adequately described? ( Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria )
whom the diagnostic will be applied in clinical practice?
determined? j. □ Identify other potential sources of confounding or bias.
sponsor have in the design, monitoring and analysis of the study? Did they provide money/medication only? Did they perform safety monitoring, perform statistical analysis or edit or write the manuscript?
This document is available on the Clinical Research in Practice: Journal of Team Hippocrates website, under “Author Instructions.” Original by Tim Caldwell.
(ClinicalTrials.gov, or equivalent) If so, are there significant deviation from the study protocol? Are the reported outcomes different than those registered? Are there missing data that was collected, but not reported? iii. Any other sources not already mentioned.
should be described again.
treatment suggestions fit with the individual’s life. If transportation, financing, insurance, family structure, disabilities, housing, nutrition, activities of daily living, etc. cause barriers to care, demonstrate how they can be overcome or how the treatment decisions are modified as a result.
based on the results of the study?
in question? i. Are there any patient specific factors that make this research more or less applicable? This can turn a good manuscript into a great manuscript.
reasonable to apply the conclusions?
knowledge about disease, therapy or diagnosis. They may also come from the critical appraisal process.
a. We highly recommend the use of a citation manager, such as EndNote®. EndNote® is freely available to the Wayne State University community here.
knowledge. When in doubt, cite. i. Requests for citation will be considered very seriously. Inadequate citation is a bad habit and leads to propagation of falsehood.