Evidence-based databases versus primary medical literature: an in-house investigation on their optimal use.
- 1 October 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 92 (4) , 407-11
Abstract
The objective is to investigate the effectiveness of evidence-based medicine (EBM) resources in providing evidence for complex clinical questions versus general care management questions to identify situations for their optimal use. In this investigation, forty complex clinical questions were randomly selected from an in-house archival database of questions received by librarians during clinical rounds. An additional forty questions were selected from a list of general care management questions received by the library from Pathways teams. To measure the effectiveness of resources in answering the questions, a team of librarians was asked to search UpToDate, the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, and HealthGate Clinical Guidelines (formerly, EBM Solutions). The team then established consensus on whether a question was fully or partially answered by one of the above-mentioned EBM resources and was instructed to record the instances in which the primary literature needed to be used to answer the question completely. The study found that the EBM resources completely answered 20.0% of the 40 complex clinical questions and 47.5% of the 40 general care management questions, partially answered 40.0% of the complex clinical questions and 22.5% of the general care management questions, and did not answer 40.0% of the complex clinical questions and 30.0% of the general care management questions. The pervasive use of EBM resources in answering clinical questions is making it imperative for information specialists to develop an expertise on their appropriate use. By exploring their use in answering complex clinical questions and general care management questions, this paper underlines the strengths and weakness of EBM resources and provides information specialists with some basic knowledge about how these resources can be combined with the primary literature to strengthen their effectiveness.This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Diagnostic Decision Support Systems: How to Determine the Gold Standard?Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association, 2003
- Obstacles to answering doctors' questions about patient care with evidence: qualitative studyBMJ, 2002
- Information needs of clinical teams: analysis of questions received by the Clinical Informatics Consult Service.2001
- PathworX: an informatics tool for quality improvement.2001
- Archie Cochrane and his legacyJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 2000
- Effects of Computer-Based Clinical Decision Support Systems on Physician Performance and Patient OutcomesJAMA, 1998
- Evidence-Based Medicine: Old French Wine with a New Canadian Label?Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, 1997
- P. C. A. Louis and the birth of clinical epidemiologyJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1996
- The demise of the "Greek Oracle" model for medical diagnostic systems.1990
- Internist-I, an Experimental Computer-Based Diagnostic Consultant for General Internal MedicineNew England Journal of Medicine, 1982