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Medical writing Module 2: Epidemiology and Evidence-Based Medicine

In module 1 i.e. induction of Medical Writing along with Types and Organisation name and What are skills required etc are covered. Have a look at the given link INTRODUCTION OF MEDICAL WRITING

Now, Let’s start with Module 2 i.e. Epidemiology and Evidence-Based Medicine

“Epidemiology is the analysis of the distribution and determinants in particular populations of health-related conditions or incidents, and the application of this study to the control of the health problems.

Epidemiology is the analysis (scientific, systematic , data-driven) of the distribution (frequency, pattern) and determinants (causes, risk factors) of health-related states and events (not just disease) in different populations (patient is group, individuals collectively viewed) and the application of this study (since epidemiology is a public health discipline) to the management of health problems.

Study

At its foundation, epidemiology is a medical discipline with strong scientific investigation methods.

Epidemiology is data-driven and is based on a clear and objective approach to data collection , analysis and interpretation.

Specific epidemiological methods continue to focus on careful observation and use of relevant reference groups to assess if what has been observed differs from what should be expected, such as the number of cases of disease in a specific area over a given period of time or the degree of exposure among people with the disease.

However, epidemiology also draws on approaches of biological , cultural, social , and behavioral sciences from other scientific fields, including biostatistics and informatics.

Even so, epidemiology is also defined as, and with good reason, the basic physics of public health.

  1. Epidemiology is a quantitative discipline focused on a working knowledge of the opportunities, statistics and sound methods of study.
  2. Epidemiology is a fundamental reasoning method focused on the creation and testing of theories based on scientific fields such as genetics, behavioral sciences, physics and ergonomics with a view to understanding health-related behaviors, states and events.

However, epidemiology is not just a research activity but an essential component of the public health, providing the foundation for directing practical and appropriate public health action based on this science and causal reasoning.

Distribution

Epidemiology is concerned with frequency and pattern of the health events in a population:

Frequency refers not only to the number of health incidents in the population, such as the number of cases of meningitis or diabetes, but also to the relation of this number to population size. The resulting rate allows for epidemiologists to assess the incidence of disease among various populations.

Pattern refers to health related incidents occurring by Time, location, person, etc. Timing trends can be annual, periodic, weekly, hourly, weekday versus weekend, or any other time breakdown that may influence the incidence of disease or injury.

Place patterns include geographic variation, differences between urban and rural, and places of work or school.

Personal characteristics include demographic factors that may be associated with disease risk, injury or disability such as age , sex , marital status, and socio-economic status, as well as behaviors and environmental exposure;

Characterizing health events by time , place and person are descriptive activities of epidemiology, discussed in more detail later in this lesson.

Determinants

Epidemiology is often used to search for the determinants, which are the causes and other factors that affect disease incidence and other events related to health.

Epidemiologists think illness isn’t. Occurrence randomly in a population, but occurs only when an person has the right accumulation of risk factors or determinants.

To search for these determinants, epidemiologists use analytic epidemiology or epidemiologic studies in order to provide the “Why” and “How” of such events.

They assess whether groups with different rates of the disease differ in their demographic characteristics, genetic or immunologic make-up, behaviors, environmental exposures, or other so-called potential risk factors.

if possible, the findings provide sufficient evidence to direct prompt and efficient public health control and prevention measures.

Health-related states or events

Epidemiology was originally focused exclusively on the epidemics of communicable diseases but was subsequently expanded to address endemic communicable diseases and non-communicable infectious diseases.

By the middle of the 20th century, infectious illnesses, accidents, birth defects, maternal-child safety, occupational health, and environmental health had been identified and applied to new epidemiological approaches.

 Then epidemiologists started to look at health and wellness-related habits such as the amount of exercise and the use of seat belt.

Nowadays, with the recent explosion in the molecular methods, epidemiologists can make significant strides in examining genetic markers of disease risk.

Certainly, the term health-related states or events may be seen as anything that affects the well-being of a population.

nevertheless, many epidemiologists still use the term “disease” as shorthand for the wide range of the health-related states and events that are studied.

Specified populations

Although epidemiologists and direct health-care providers (clinicians) are both concerned with occurrence and control of disease, they vary greatly in how they view “the patient.”

The clinician is anxious about the health of an individual; the epidemiologist is anxious about the collective health of the people in a community or population.

Or one can say,  the clinician’s “patient” is the individual; the epidemiologist’s “patient” is the community.

Therefore, the clinician and the epidemiologist have diverse responsibilities when faced with a person with illness.

For example, when the patient with diarrheal disease presents, both are interested in establishing the correct diagnosis.

On the other hand, while the clinician usually focuses on treating and caring for the individual, the epidemiologist focuses on identifying the exposure or source that caused the illness; the number of other persons who may have been similarly exposed; the potential for the further spread in the community; and interventions to prevent additional cases or recurrences.

Application

Epidemiology is not just “the study of” health in the population; it also involves applying the knowledge gained by the studies to the community-based practice.

Like practice of medicine, the practice of epidemiology is both a science and an art. To make the proper diagnosis and prescribe appropriate treatment for the patient, the clinician combines medical (scientific) knowledge with the experience, clinical judgment, and understanding of the patient.

Likewise, the epidemiologist uses the scientific methods of the descriptive and analytic epidemiology as well as experience, epidemiologic judgment, and understanding of the local conditions in “diagnosing” the health of a community and proposing appropriate, practical, and acceptable public health interventions to manage and prevent disease in the community.

Evidence-Based Medicine

Evidence-based medicine (EBM) definition has generated considerable concern among health care professionals over the last decade.

According to definition Evidence-Based Medicine represents the integration of clinical expertise, patient’s values and best available evidence in the process of decision making related to patients health care.

Evidence-based medicine (EBM) is the deliberate, clear, judicious, and fair use of new, best evidence in individual patient care decision making.

EBM combines the best available scientific knowledge with the clinical experience and patient beliefs. It is a trend aimed at increasing the use of high-quality clinical research in making clinical decisions.

EBM needs the clinician’s new skills, including successful literature-searching, and the application of structured standards of evidence in clinical literature evaluation.

Evidence-based medicine practice is a lifelong, self-directed, problem-based learning experience in which caring for one’s own patients provides the need for clinically relevant knowledge about treatment, prognosis, rehabilitation and other clinical and health-care concerns.

It’s not “cookbook” of recipes, but it offers cost-effective and improved health care with its successful implementation. The main distinction between evidence-based medicine and conventional medicine is not that the evidence is taken into account by EBM when the latter does not. Both takes into account evidence; however, EBM demands stronger evidence than commonly used.

One of the greatest accomplishments in evidence-based medicine has been the production in systematic reviews and meta-analyses, methods by which researchers define several studies on a subject, isolate the best ones and then critically examine them to summarize the best evidence available.

Tomorrow’s EBM-oriented clinicians have three tasks: a) to use summaries of evidence in clinical practice; b) to help establish and update selected systematic reviews or evidence-based recommendations in their field of expertise; and c) to enroll patients in the treatment, diagnosis, and prognosis studies on which medical practice is based.

Medical awareness is growing every day, such that commonly established theories easily become old and even an influx of scientific evidence becomes difficult to pursue.

There are apparent challenges as physicians try to keep up with the latest developments reported in medical journals: for example, general practitioners can read 19 papers per day, and we know that many of them only have one hour a week for this.

Need for evidence-based approach in making decisions in the family medicine

The core of Family medicine in relation to doctor-patient.

One of the core aspects of this partnership is the decision-making process, which can differ from specific types of clinical decisions (e.g. the patient has a sore throat, larynx was red but without suppuration-why, it will prescribe antibiotics?) or (patient complained of frontal pain for two weeks, she was present when a patient walked-do you need to conduct CT of the head?), etc.

Difference between evidence- based medicine and evidence based health care

Having a distinction between these two words is worthwhile. Evidence-based medicine is a physician’s systematic approach to decision taking applicable to the actual patient.

Unlike this, Evidence-based health care is a much broader term which requires advanced understanding of the beliefs, values and attitudes of patients, families and physicians.

Evidence-based health care is also based on evidence, but primarily population-level data.

Gap between research and practice

One of the primary reasons why there is a great interest in pursuing evidence-based medicine is the increasing number of cases where traditional medical practice can not keep up with the clinical evidence available.

For example , despite strong evidence during the seventies of the last century that treatment such as thrombolytic therapy and aspirin use was successful in treating acute myocardial infarction, it took nearly a decade for such therapies to become standard in clinical procedures for acute myocardial infarction patients.

Likewise, there are examples of complicated scientific research (evidences) being available everywhere, and its practical application. On the one hand, there is a lack of resolution that will synthesize the primary scientific researches and make systematic results.

On the other side, that indicates lack of ability of available evidences obtained in research which will gain relevant information which consumers of health services and medical professional needs to make decisions. In broader sense, that reflects lack of appropriate frames, systems and strategies which will more efficiently influence of professional conduct.

Complexity of the primary health care (family medicine)

It is understood that the patients come to the family doctor with poorly described symptoms and wide clinical differences-the number of these patients in family practice is definitely the largest.

 They are so called symptoms of illness in the “grey zone”, generally multiple complains of the patients on different organic systems. Rarely that is a single problem.

The truth is that it is only possible to solve a limited number of cases during the first doctor-patient meeting. Family practitioner is also unable to plan patient treatment because it is a case of complicated conditions and it is difficult to schedule treatment.

For general practice, the dynamic nature of research ensures that the patient needs assistance in the dimension of the illness (feeling ill) for which there is no clear proof of any intervention’s efficacy.

Gill and colleagues’ study is based on a longitudinal review of series of doctor-patient interactions, showing that high percentage (81 percent) of general practice intervention can be backed by evidence from randomized controlled trials and (or) compelling non-experimental evidence.

There is also a need to explore how the dynamics of the doctor-patient relationship within family medicine can be integrated.

One of EBM’s key principles is the hierarchy of validating facts based on which judgment is taken, meaning it is important to determine the importance of evidence before making decisions.

According to that concept most important evidence, for example effectiveness of the single therapeutic mean, comes from the results of the multicenter, randomized, comparison, controlled clinical study.
Evidences of least value are based on the studies of the physiology functions and clinicians observations.

Classification of evidence – information levels

Evidence-based medicine categorizes different forms of scientific evidence and rates them out of the numerous inequalities that bedeviled medical science according to the extent of their liberation.

1.Evidences obtained by the meta-analysis of several randomized controlled research (RCR).

1b.Evidences from only one RCR.

2a.Evidences from well designed controlled research RCR.

2b.Evidences from one quasi experimental research.

3.Evidences from the non experimental studies (comparative research, case study), according to some, for example Textbooks.

4.Evidences from experts and clinical practice.

The principle of EBM emphasizes, that the foundation of any medical decisions regarding the optimal diagnostic or therapy procedure are scientific evidences from clinical research, and clinical experience and intuition are of great help, but not main basis in decision-making.

How to start: 5 steps process for use of evidence oriented approach in family medicine

Where do family medicine doctors continue in their daily practice if they want to follow evidence-based approach? The McMaster University Community for Evidence-Based Medicine Resource defined the method that each individual physician will adopt in implementing this approach in 5 phases.

  • Problem definition,
  • Search for wanted sources of the information,
  • Critical evaluation of information,
  • Application of information of the patient,
  • Efficacy evaluation of this application on a patient.
 Step 1. Defining problem

Each doctor several times the day is in the position of making various medical decisions. Often in process of the medical decision-making occur questions such as: for and against the use of certain therapies, whether to use a diagnostic test or screening procedure, the risk or prognosis of the particular disease or cost-effectiveness of specific interventions.

It is clear that the already busy doctor, will not be able to answer in this way all the questions that come in practice and therefore must resort to the process of determining priorities, as well as refining issues that needs to be asked.

A clinician starts his or her search for the best and newest data needed to solve individual patient’s problem by formulating an answerable clinical question. Good clinical question must be clear, directly focused on the problem, and answerable by searching the medical literature.

PICO format

A good clinical question should have four essential components structured in the PICO format (Patient or problem, Intervention, Comparison, Outcome).

PICO format:

  • the patient or problem – who are the relevant patients, what kind of the problem we try to solve?
  • the intervention – what is the management strategy, diagnostic test or exposure (drugs, diagnostic test, foods or surgical procedure)?
  • comparison of interventions – what is the control or alternative management strategy, test or exposure that we will compare?
  • the outcome – what are the patient-relevant consequences of the exposure in which we are interested?

Type of clinical question

The most common type of clinical question is about how to treat a disease or condition. Such questions are questions about intervention.

Types of clinical questions:

  • questions about intervention
  • questions about etiology and risk factors
  • questions about frequency and rate
  • questions about diagnosis
  • questions about prognosis and prediction
  • question about cost-effectiveness
  • question about phenomena
Step 2. Search for wanted sources of information

After formulating the clinical question, which stems from a concrete patient, the next step is to search for relevant evidence that will provide the answer to the question.

This is not always easy, especially in the Family medicine, in which the problems caries the poorlydefined problems in the start.

Moreover, there are several sources of knowledge that may aid, including medical journals, coping with other family medicine concerns, looking for online records, and connecting with colleagues.

The ideal information source is valid (contains high quality data), relevant (clinically applicable), comprehensive (has data on all benefits and harms of all possible interventions), and is user-friendly (is quick and easy to access and use).

Step 3. Critical evaluation of the information

It is important to read it carefully when we decide which magazine to read, since not all of the published information is of equal quality and importance. Critical assessment of the papers is a process requiring thorough reading and review of the methods, contents and conclusions.

A key question that should be kept in mind is “Do I believe in the results enough that I’ll be ready to a similar approach, or in achievement of similar results with my patients?” Skills to obtain the ability of the critical evaluation should be learned and practiced as any other clinical skills.

Step 4. Application of information of the patient

In practice, the fourth step in the process of using Evidence Based Medicine is the decision on how to apply the information acquired on the particular circumstances pertaining to each patient. This is possibly a critical, if not the most complicated, step in the process.

Now it is necessary to decide whether there is something in relation to our patient because of which it would be necessary to discard the acquired information.

The questions that we should ask before the decision to apply the results of the study are:

Are the participants in the study similar enough to my patient?

Is the treatment available and is the health care system prepared to fund it?

What alternatives are available?

Do the potential side effects of the drug or procedure outweigh the benefits?

Are the outcomes appropriate to the patient? Does treatment conflict with the patient’s values and expectations?

When anything does not work, it is important to balance the potential harm from the gain and do all that in cooperation with the individual, where in practice our decision will be shared in the end.

Step 5. Efficacy evaluation of EBM application on a patient

The final step is the evaluation of Evidence – based approach and efficiency of its application to a specific patient. When anything does not work, it is important to balance the potential harm from the gain and do all that in cooperation with the individual, where in practice our decision will be shared in the end.

If the data differ significantly, it would be necessary to investigate why some patients did not respond to the changes introduced in the expected way and what can be done to change it.

The EBM-oriented clinicians of the tomorrow have three tasks:

To use evidence summaries in the clinical practice;

To help develop and update selected systematic reviews or evidence-based guidelines in their area of the expertise; and

To enrol patients in studies of treatment, diagnosis and prognosis on which medical practice is based.

Many epidemiological principles, methods and techniques are put into good use in EBM.

The EB “movement” is attractive in it’s use of clearly defined procedures, generalizing (not always explicitly) the application of good epidemiologic principles, methods, and techniques. Epidemiology now needs to help determine the use of an EB approach.”

https://www.cdc.gov/csels/dsepd/ss1978/lesson1/section1.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epidemiology
https://www.eupati.eu/pharmacoepidemiology/evidence-based-medicine/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3789163/
https://www.hopkinsmedicine.org/gim/research/method/ebm.html

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