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Published byΑνατόλιος Δασκαλόπουλος Modified over 6 years ago
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Systematic reviews, meta analyses, and cost effectiveness studies
Paul K. Crane, MD MPH General Internal Medicine Harborview Medical Center
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Types of review articles
Expert opinion Generally commissioned or specifically requested Based on literature and experience in the field Systematic reviews Can be done be anyone Avoid biases of experts; seeks out all data Economics papers – cost effectiveness studies Specifically relate to money
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Systematic reviews “systematic” part is the science part – the search strategy and specific criteria are specified, so it could be replicated Work best (as we’ll see) with a specific question, the more specific the better A great idea if you have a pre-specified niche and you know what that is Downside: tedium. Make sure it’s an area you want to spend time with
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Meta-analysis Mathematical technique for combining data from multiple studies Applied to systematic reviews if combining data is used; systematic reviews need have no numerical results, though
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Economics papers Cost-effectiveness studies and their ilk
Develop an economic model of a population with various outcomes and the costs of each of those outcomes Thought experiment: what would outcomes be if we did an intervention instead Often expressed as cost per life year saved, or cost per QALY Models only as good as primary data
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General points on these designs
Require little funding Great way to get published in an area as a junior person and obtain a reputation Great way to systematically read the literature, but there’s a lot of garbage; need to consider study quality Those expert review articles aren’t so bad after all!
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