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EBHC

Evidence-Based Health Care
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Everything is a poison

Professor Jeffrey Aronson, Consultant Physician and Clinical Pharmacologist, Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, gives a talk on dose-response curves for the EBHC podcast series.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Safe and effective drugs: The need to use all the available evidence to inform the effectiveness of commonly used medicines

Carl Heneghan, Professor of Evidence-Based Medicine, employs evidence-based methods to research diagnostic reasoning, test accuracy and communicating diagnostic results to a wider audience.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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The secret diary of a health ethnographer - what's it *really* like doing qualitative observation in operating rooms, ambulances, triage call centres and other health care settings?

This guest lecture draws on nearly thirty years' experience of doing qualitative research in a variety of health settings that contain people, blood, injury, disease, emotions, and technologies.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Big data in heart failure - opportunities and realities

The global health burden of heart failure is high, both as the common end-point for many cardiovascular diseases (e.g. hypertension and heart attacks) and a common point on the trajectory of non-cardiovascular diseases (e.g. chronic respiratory disease).
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Behavioural Interventions to Improve the Quality of the Grocery Shopping

This evening lecture is given in conjunction with the Introduction to Study Design and Research Methods accredited short course, part of the Evidence-Based Healthcare programme at the University of Oxford's Department for Continuing Education.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Are we really advancing qualitative methods in health research?

For many good reasons, semi-structured interviews, focus groups, thematic analysis, and realist tales have become key tools within the qualitative researcher's methodological toolkit.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Why poor diagnostic reasoning is failing patients, the public and health systems

Carl Heneghan asks the question, "What is driving the increase in diagnostic testing in healthcare?" and discusses why expectations, technology and the media are contributing to the problems of too much medicine and overdiagnosis.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Systematic reviews: the past the present and the future

Making decisions and choices about health and social care need access to high-quality evidence from research. Systematic reviews provide this by both highlighting the quality of existing studies and by themselves providing a high-quality summary.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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How imperfect can a study be?

Professor Alan Silman is an epidemiologist and a rheumatologist and is the co-author of 'Epidemiological Studies: A Practical Guide', which is the recommended textbook for the module 'Introduction to Study Design and Research Methods'.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Adults' experiences of trying to lose weight on their own: findings from three qualitative syntheses

Jamie Hartmann-Boyce is a Senior Researcher in Health Behaviours, based at the Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford. Her work focusses on obesity and tobacco control and her particular interests lie in evidence synthes
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Evidence-Based Manifesto for better healthcare

Professor Carl Heneghan gives a talk for the Evidence Based Healthcare series.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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The jugglers and the black cat

There has never been such a high demand for our personal data, such that it is often said that individuals are the product, not just the client.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Fake surgeries and dummy pills – control for bias and study design in trials on treatment efficacy in chronic pain

In this talk Karolina presented various types of study design she has used in trials of treatments for chronic pain. Karolina also discussed why blinding is important and why a placebo control may be necessary, even in surgical trials.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Vagina Dialogues: Challenging Stigmas around Menstruation, Menopause and Female Sexuality

Communication taboos surround many aspects of women’s health and wellbeing, from menstruation to menopause to sexual pleasure.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Value-based healthcare: Health economics re-packaged or re-packaging health economics?

Sir Muir Gray and Lucy Abel debate: Is value-based health care nothing more than health economics re-packaged or is health economics nothing more than only one of the six contributors to value-based healthcare?
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Launch of new website to catalogue biases affecting health and medical research

Professor Carl Heneghan and Dr David Nunan from the Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine presented the launch of a new website that catalogues the important biases affecting health and medical research.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Beyond accuracy: Evidence gaps and unintended consequences. Factors influencing utility of point-of-care diagnostic tests

Point-of-care or near-patient-tests, are as these descriptors suggest, medical diagnostic tests which can be performed by a clinician, patient, or carer of a patient, without the need for samples to be transported to laboratories.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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Mixed methods in the real world: a messy business?

Dr Katherine Pollard gives a talk for the Evidence Based Healthcare seminar series.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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The Future of Healthcare - Evidencer and Value Based

Muir Gray is now working with both NHS England and Public Health England to bring about a transformation of care with the aim of increasing value for both populations and individuals. Here he gives a talk on improving healthcare systems.
Evidence-Based Health Care
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How we change behaviour and what to do to support it: lessons from randomised controlled trials and other research

Professor Paul Aveyard, Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences gives a talk on behavioural change in evidence based medicine.

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