Title: How to Formulate Clinical QuestionProblem
 1How to Formulate Clinical Question/Problem 
- Pyatat Tatsanavivat M.D. 
- EMB Workshop 
- CEU-KKU 2548
2Clinical Decision Making
Patient circumstances
Preferences, values and rights
Evidence from research 
 3WHEN TO SEARCH FOR EVIDENCE
- When a patient problem is bothering you 
- or 
- when a patient presents with a comman problem you 
 will encounter often
4EBM Skills
- Formulate a clinically relevant and searchable 
 question
- Find the evidence 
- Evaluate the evidence 
- Validity 
- Importance of results 
- Apply to your patient 
- USE COMMON SENSE
5Where Do Questions Come From?
- Patients 
- Diagnosis 
- Etiology 
- Prognosis 
- Treatment/prevention 
- Practice variations-which is best? 
- New treatment or diagnosis
Counsell C. Ann Intern Med. 1997127380-7 
 6Importance of a Question
- Depends on area of expertise 
- Effects on patients 
- severity-morbidity/mortality/QoL 
- Duration 
- Financial cost 
- Effects on society 
- Prevalence/severity 
- Financial cost 
- Feasibility of assessment 
- Ability to change practice 
Counsell C. Ann Intern Med. 1997127380-7 
 7Formulating the Question
- Basic components 
- Type of person 
- Type of exposure 
- Type of control 
- Outcome of interest 
- Type of study design 
Counsell C. Ann Intern Med. 1997127380-7 
 8Type of Person
- Disease or condition 
-  Definition 
-  Cause 
-  Stage 
-  Severity 
- Personal characteristics 
-  Age 
-  Sex 
-  Symptoms 
- Population or setting 
-  Community 
-  Hospital (outpatient or inpatient) 
Counsell C. Ann Intern Med. 1997127380-7 
 9Type of Exposure
Definition Intensity or dose Timing 
 Duration Method of delivery group therapy 
 individual therapy oral therapy or 
 intravenous therapy)
-  Risk factor 
-  Prognostic factor 
-  Intervention 
-  Diagnosis
Counsell C. Ann Intern Med. 1997127380-7 
 10Type of Control Absence of risk or prognostic 
factor (risk and prognostic reviews) Gold 
standard test (diagnostic reviews) Treatment 
controls (treatment and prevention 
reviews) Active treatment or no treatment 
 Placebo control or open control
Counsell C. Ann Intern Med. 1997127380-7 
 11Type of Outcome
Importance to patient Clinically relevant or 
surrogate Death, quality of life, disability, 
and symptoms or signs Beneficial and harmful 
effects of interventions Use of health care 
resources (economic evaluations) Definitions Timin
g of outcome assessment
Counsell C. Ann Intern Med. 1997127380-7 
 12Type of Study Design
- Experimental or observational 
- Randomized or nonrandomized controlled trails 
- Blinded or open trials 
- Confounded or unconfounded studies (that is a 
 comparison of treatment A versus no treatment is
 confounded by treatment B, whereas trial of A
 and B versus B alone is not confounded
Counsell C. Ann Intern Med. 1997127380-7 
 13THE FOCUSED CLINICAL QUESTION
- P  Relevant patients 
- I  Interventions or risk factors 
- C  Comparisons 
- O  Outcomes of interest (benefits, harm, costs) 
- Ex is eye patching improve the healing rate of 
 traumatic corneal epithelial defects?
14Should a echinacea preparation used for common 
cold?
Subjects with common cold 
- Patient 
- Intervention 
- Outcome 
Echinacea preparation 
Total daily symptom scores TDSS 
 15Medical Students Questions
- What are the symptoms of common cold? 
- How does echincea work? 
- What is the etiology of common cold? 
- What is the incidence of common cold? 
16Background Questions
- Ask for general knowledge about a disorder 
- Have two essential components 
- A question root (who, what, where, when, how, 
 why) with a verb
- A disorder, or an aspect of a disorder 
17Practitioners Questions
- In this patient are any clinical findings 
 sufficiently powerful to diagnose common cold?
- Should common cold be treated with drug or 
 biological extract?
- What are the potential harmful effects of common 
 cold?
- In these patient , what are the predictors 
 indicating echinacea will be beneficial
- What is the compliance of echinacea treamtent? 
18- Notice that these questions ask for specific 
 knowledge about how to diagnose, prognose, and
 treat the patients with common cold, which might
 be called foreground knowledge.
- Ask for specific knowledge about managing 
 patients with a disorder
19Foreground Questions
- Have four (or three) essential components 
- The patient and/or problem of interest 
- The main intervention (defined very broadly, 
 including an exposure, a diagnostic test, a
 prognostic factor, a treatment, a patient
 perception, and so forth)
- Comparison intervention(s), if relevant 
- The clinical outcome(s) of interest. 
20Background and foreground questions
C
A - less C - experienced 
 21- Clinical practice demands large amounts of both 
 background and foreground knowledge.
22Background vs Foreground Questions
- Background 
- What is? 
- Use Textbooks for these 
- Foreground 
- Specific Clinical Issues 
- More Sophisticated Resources
23Sources of Relevant Studies
- Electronic databases 
- Manual search journal, proceedings  book 
- Reference lists 
- Existing study registries 
- Current-awareness publications 
- Pharmaceutical and appliance companies 
- Personal contact with colleagues  researchers 
Counsell C. Ann Intern Med. 1997127380-7 
 24Key Points to Remember
- Choose important  well-focused question 
- Refine the four major components 
- Set clear, workable inclusion criteria 
- Take time to plan a sensible and thorough search 
 strategy
- Use multiple overlapping sources of data 
- Ensure that clinical and methodological expertise 
 and support are available
Counsell C. Ann Intern Med. 1997127380-7