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Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer

Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer

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Page 1: Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer

Evidence Based Public Health

John SandarsHonorary Senior Lecturer

Page 2: Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer

It’s about making sense of what we do ….

And why we do it

Page 3: Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer

On Dec, 31, 1664, Samuel Pepys, taking stock of the past year, confided to his diary:

“I bless God, I never have been in so good plight as to my health … but I am at a great loss to know whether it be my Hare's foot, or taking every morning a pill of Turpentine, or my having left off the wearing of a gowne”.

Page 4: Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer

Making A Decision

• Need for evidence

- information that I can believe!

• Making a judgment

– competing demands

Page 5: Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer

THE EVIDENCE

Prospective controlled trial (1753)

Page 6: Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer

First RCT (1948)

Page 7: Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer

Systematic Reviews (1972)

Page 8: Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer

Rise of Evidence-Based Medicine

• First described in 1992

• A new approach to teaching medicine

• A “revolution” in medical practice

Page 9: Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer

Definition of EBM

“The integration of best research evidence with clinical expertise and patient values.”

Sackett DL. EBM: how to practice and teach EBM.2000

Page 10: Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer

Steps of EBM

• Convert the need for information into an answerable question

• Track down the best evidence

• Critically appraise that evidence

• Integrate the appraisal with clinical expertise and the individual patient

• Evaluate

Sackett DL. EBM: how to practice and teach EBM.2000

Page 11: Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer

Jenicek M. J Epidemiol 1997;7:187-97

Definition of EBPH

“EBPH is the conscientious, explicit, and judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of communities and populations in the domain of health protection, disease prevention, health maintenance and improvement.”

Page 12: Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer

Steps of EBPH

• Access the evidence – Variety of different sources since complex

problems and different perspectives

• Appraise the evidence

• Apply the evidence

Page 13: Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer

Steps of EBPH

• Access the evidence • Appraise the evidence

• Apply the evidence–complex system–different perspectives–evaluate the fit

Page 14: Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer

Implementing evidence based medicine in general practice: audit and qualitative study of antithrombotic treatment for atrial fibrillationHowitt A & Armstrong D (1999)

British Medical Journal 318 :1324–1327

Difficulties in closing the evidence to practice gap:

• previous experiences (including minor bleeding)• difficulty of organizing anticoagulation in elderly patients• relationship and knowledge of the individual patient

Page 15: Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer

Low carbohydrate-high protein diet and incidence of cardiovascular diseases in Swedish women: Prospective cohort study.

Lagiou P, Sandin S et al. BMJ 2012; DOI:10.1136/bmj.e4026.

Page 16: Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer

Internal Validity (Biases)

• Sample• Adherence to diet over time• Confounding lifestyle factors• Outcome – single questionnaire

External Validity

• Population

Page 17: Evidence Based Public Health John Sandars Honorary Senior Lecturer