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EVALUATION OF AN EPIDEMIOLOGIC STUDY

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Graphics tables, charts, figures that summarize findings. Discussion/Comment/Conclusions ... External validity to which population(s) can the results be ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: EVALUATION OF AN EPIDEMIOLOGIC STUDY


1
EVALUATION OF AN EPIDEMIOLOGIC STUDY
  • Melissa Fleschler/Sharon Cooper
  • July 19, 2001

2
The basic structure of an article
  • Abstract/Summary
  • Overview or summary
  • Short description of sample
  • Highlights of results
  • General statement of significance

3
Introduction
  • Background information
  • history, pathophysiology, descriptive
    epidemiology of problem
  • Review of work of others
  • Rationale for present study
  • Study Questions/Hypothesis

4
Methods/Materials and Methods
  • Study design
  • Subject selection procedures
  • Description of Sample
  • Description of Independent and Dependent
    Variables
  • Methods of measurement
  • Description of analytic techniques
  • Quality control procedures
  • Specific analyses to be performed

5
Results
  • What happened?
  • Descriptive Statistics
  • Univariate, Multivariate analyses, etc.
  • Graphicstables, charts, figuresthat summarize
    findings

6
Discussion/Comment/Conclusions
  • Meaning, significance of work
  • Comparison of work with others
  • Critique of study
  • discussion of limitations (e.g., type of biases
    present) as well as strengths
  • Disclaimers, apologies, speculation, fantasy

7
References/Bibliography
  • Evidence that work of others has been considered
  • Leads to further exploration of the subject

Ref Gelbach, 1993
8
Paper Critique
9
THE QUESTION
  • What is the research objective being answered?
    What is the hypothesis being tested?
  • Is it the original objective of the authors or
    secondary to their original research?
  • If it is secondary, was the reported research
    question formulated after the data were analyzed
    (e.g., data driven)?

10
THE DESIGN
  • Is the study design that was used clearly
    definedwhat is it? Is this study design
    appropriate?
  • Identify the target population, study population
    and examined population.
  • What was the response rate?

11
THE CONDUCT
  • Were the study variables identified and defined?
    (e.g., what were the exposure and outcome
    variables?)
  • How were the major study variables measured?

12
THE ANALYSIS
  • What measure(s) of epidemiologic association was
    calculated?
  • Is the analysis appropriate for the study design?
  • If necessary, were potential confounders
    controlled for in the analysis?
  • Were confidence intervals calculated?
  • Were p values reported?
  • Are the findings internally consistent (i.e., do
    tables add up and are different tables
    numerically consistent?)

13
THE RESULTS
  • What were the major results as presented by the
    authors?
  • How large is the observed association?
  • Is there evidence of a dose-response relationship?

14
VALIDITY
  • Internal validitywas the potential presence of
    bias addressed in either the design of the study
    or in the analysis?
  • Selection bias
  • Information bias
  • Confounding
  • In what direction would each potential bias
    influence the results?
  • External validityto which population(s) can the
    results be generalized?

15
THE INTERPRETATION
  • Are the findings consistent with other studies?
  • What was the author(s) interpretation?
  • Do you agree with this interpretation?
  • Did the authors clearly state the limitations of
    their research?
  • Do you believe there are any other limitations or
    biases inherent in the study that affect the
    author(s) interpretation?
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