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Evaluating the evidence: an introduction

Amanda Burls (Senior Registrar in Public Health Medicine, Northamptonshire Health Authority)
Ruairidh Milne (Critical Appraisal Skills Programme, Oxford Institute of Health Sciences, PO Box 777, Oxford OX7 7LF)

Journal of Clinical Effectiveness

ISSN: 1361-5874

Article publication date: 1 February 1996

90

Abstract

Health care has always sought to improve the health of patients, but our interventions do not always do more good than harm. Sometimes ineffective or harmful interventions are used and effective interventions are not used. A key problem has been that decisions are too often based on inadequate evidence or that sound evidence is overlooked. Basing decisions on evidence involves three steps: finding evidence relating to the decision, evaluating it, and acting on it. Evaluating evidence in turn involves assessing its validity, understanding the findings and their implications, and understanding the relevance of the results in the context of local decision‐making. Developing evidence‐based health care is a collective enterprise which, while not easy, is something to which everyone in the health service can contribute.

Citation

Burls, A. and Milne, R. (1996), "Evaluating the evidence: an introduction", Journal of Clinical Effectiveness, Vol. 1 No. 2, pp. 59-62. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb020839

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1996, MCB UP Limited

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