A controlled trial of teaching critical appraisal of the clinical literature to medical students
- 8 May 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in JAMA
- Vol. 257 (18) , 2451-2454
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.257.18.2451
Abstract
We carried out a controlled trial of teaching the critical appraisal of clinical literature among final-year clinical clerks. Tutors at two of four teaching hospitals were offered a short course in the critical appraisal of clinical articles that describe diagnostic tests and treatments and were assisted in identifying and appraising specialty-specific articles that described those diagnostic tests and treatments that clinical clerks were sure to encounter during their clerkship tutorials. Tutors and clerks at the other two hospitals received no special intervention and served as controls. Experimental and control clinical clerks completed pretests and posttests of their ability to take and defend a stand on whether to apply specific diagnostic tests and treatments in specific clinical situations. Experimental clerks demonstrated both statistically and "clinically" significant increases in their critical appraisal skills, improving 37% on the diagnostic test exercise and 8% on the treatment exercise; control students' scores deteriorated for both. (JAMA1987;257:2451-2454)This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Safety, Efficacy, and Effectiveness of Clinical Practices: A New InitiativeAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1982
- From Galen to Xerox: The Authoritarian Reference in MedicineAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1982