Evidence-based medicine/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>John Stephenson mNo edit summary |
imported>John Stephenson (→Other related topics: link) |
||
Line 16: | Line 16: | ||
==Other related topics== | ==Other related topics== | ||
{{r| | {{r|Complementary and alternative medicine}} | ||
{{r|Complexity science}} | {{r|Complexity science}} |
Revision as of 10:50, 2 December 2013
- See also changes related to Evidence-based medicine, or pages that link to Evidence-based medicine or to this page or whose text contains "Evidence-based medicine".
Parent topics
- Health [r]: The default state of an organism under optimal conditions, a state characterized by the absence of disease and by the slowest natural rate of senescing. [e]
- Health science [r]: The helping professions that use applied science to improve health and to treat disease. [e]
- Medicine [r]: The study of health and disease of the human body. [e]
Subtopics
- Teaching evidence-based medicine [r]: Conscientious education of medical personnel with current best clinical evidence, in making decisions about the care of individual patients. [e]
- Evidence-based individual decision making [r]: evidence-based medicine (EBM) as practiced by the individual health care provider and an individual patient. [e]
- Clinical decision support system [r]: Interactive computer programs that directly assist physicians and other health professionals with decision-making tasks. [e]
- Marcia Angell [r]: An American physician at Harvard, author, and first female editor-in-chief of the New England Journal of Medicine. [e]
- Electronic health record [r]: Longitudinal collection of electronic health information about individual patients or populations [e]
- Electronic medical record [r]: A digital form of medical (hospital or clinic) record. [e]
- Clinical data warehouse [r]: A facility that houses all electronic data collected at a clinical center. [e]
- Odds ratio [r]: Ratio of the relative incidence (odds) of a target disorder in an experimental group relative to the relative incidence in a control group; reflects how the risk of having a particular disorder is influenced by the treatment (odds ratio of 1 means that there is no benefit of treatment compared to the control group). [e]
- Complementary and alternative medicine [r]: Set of therapies and treatments not considered mainstream or scientific. [e]
- Complexity science [r]: Interdisciplinary approach to understanding the structure, interdependencies and dynamic behavior of complex physical, biological and social systems. [e]