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Evidence-Based Practice (EBP)
has become a catchword in recent years. To some, it identifies
a series of centres charged with producing evidence reports
and technology assessments to support guideline development
by other groups. To others, it means the centralised production
of guidelines and their integration into practice. These schools of
thought share the assumption that the ordinary practitioner
is best served by a centralised process, external to his /
her practice and have been said to practice 'Top-Down' EBP (Glasziou P, CEBP Oxford;
personal communication, 2004).
While centralised academic activity is
important and the key to a good evidence base, there is another
school of thought about EBP. To this group, EBP is "the
integration of best research evidence with clinical expertise
and patient values". This approach has roots in the fields
of clinical medicine, epidemiology and adult learning theory
(problem-based learning). It is concerned with information,
individualised problems,
and the use of the Internet
and modern informatics
to get the best research evidence into practice. The underlying
assumption is that the ordinary practitioner is best served
by a de-centralised but exact approach, internal to his/her
practice. Glasziou has named this school of thought 'Bottom-up' EBP. Centralised academic activity focuses on identifying
the best research and making it readily available via the
Internet.
In this site we apply the principles of 'Bottom-up' EBP
to Radiology to assist the development of Evidence-Based
Radiology (EBR). Our site logo highlights both the "i"
within Radiology and the Internet connection to Radiology
that make this approach possible. You do not have to be an
academic radiologist to use this site. It is geared towards
helping you answer clinical radiology questions arising in
your practice. The EBR Overview link will lead you to further
background information. The EBR Process link brings you through
the problem-solving methodology. EBR in practice illustrates
some ways to incorporate these concepts into the daily life
of a Radiology Department.
We hope you enjoy using this site. If you have any comments, or notice any
faulty links, please tell us about them using the 'feedback' link at the bottom of every
page.
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