支持初级保健实践的证据有多好?

Evidence-Based Medicine Pub Date : 2017-06-01 Epub Date: 2017-05-29 DOI:10.1136/ebmed-2017-110704
Mark H Ebell, Randi Sokol, Aaron Lee, Christopher Simons, Jessica Early
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引用次数: 42

摘要

我们的目标是确定初级保健实践的建议在多大程度上是基于高质量的基于研究的证据,以及它们在多大程度上是基于改善健康结果的证据(以患者为导向的证据)。作为研究的基础,我们使用了Essential Evidence,这是一个面向多面手的在线循证医学参考。721章中的每一章都使用推荐强度分类法(SORT)为实践提供了A, B或C级的总体建议。SORT A代表一致和高质量的以患者为导向的证据;SORT B是不一致的或质量有限的以患者为导向的证据,而SORT C是专家意见、惯例或建议,依赖于替代结果或中间结果。成对的研究人员依次提取每一章的证据评级,差异由第一作者解决。在3251份总体推荐中,18%被评为“A”,34%被评为“B”,49%被评为“C”。推荐最多的临床类别是妊娠和分娩、心血管疾病和精神疾病;最少的是血液学,肌肉骨骼和风湿病,以及中毒和毒性。“A”级建议在治疗中最常见,在诊断中最不常见。只有51%的建议是基于报告以患者为导向的结果(如发病率、死亡率、生活质量或症状减轻)的研究。总之,大约一半的初级保健实践建议是基于以患者为导向的证据,但只有18%是基于一致的、高质量的研究中以患者为导向的证据。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How good is the evidence to support primary care practice?

Our goal was to determine the extent to which recommendations for primary care practice are informed by high-quality research-based evidence, and the extent to which they are based on evidence of improved health outcomes (patient-oriented evidence). As a substrate for study, we used Essential Evidence, an online, evidence-based, medical reference for generalists. Each of the 721 chapters makes overall recommendations for practice that are graded A, B or C using the Strength of Recommendations Taxonomy (SORT). SORT A represents consistent and good quality patient-oriented evidence; SORT B is inconsistent or limited quality patient-oriented evidence and SORT C is expert opinion, usual practice or recommendations relying on surrogate or intermediate outcomes. Pairs of researchers abstracted the evidence ratings for each chapter in tandem, with discrepancies resolved by the lead author. Of 3251 overall recommendations, 18% were graded 'A', 34% were 'B' and 49% were 'C'. Clinical categories with the most 'A' recommendations were pregnancy and childbirth, cardiovascular, and psychiatric; those with the least were haematological, musculoskeletal and rheumatological, and poisoning and toxicity. 'A' level recommendations were most common for therapy and least common for diagnosis. Only 51% of recommendations are based on studies reporting patient-oriented outcomes, such as morbidity, mortality, quality of life or symptom reduction. In conclusion, approximately half of the recommendations for primary care practice are based on patient-oriented evidence, but only 18% are based on patient-oriented evidence from consistent, high-quality studies.

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