Publisher's Synopsis
Teaching Clinical Research Methodology by Example has two principal objectives:
- To tell the story of the research process in action and to provide a glimpse into the minds of the researchers responsible for some of the major advances (and setbacks) in modern medicine.
- To explain the principles of evidence-based medicine by reviewing the research methods required to prove or disprove a theory.
This text is written in a style accessible to health professionals who do not have a background in clinical epidemiology. The first section of the book, ‘Causation', begins with an explanation of “casual” and “coincidental” associations and follows with examples:- Smoking and lung cancer.
- Dietary fats and coronary heart disease.
- Cause and cure of peptic ulcers.
- Viral infection and cancer of the cervix.
- Vaccination and autism.
- Venous obstruction as the cause of multiple sclerosis.
Written for medical students, practicing physicians in all areas of specialty, medical historians, and medical writers, the book includes a chapter on assessing net clinical benefits of a treatment, and closes with a glossary of methodological terms.