Ebm@school – a curriculum of critical health literacy for secondary school students
A curriculum based on the concept of evidence-based medicine, which consists of six modules.
| 0 Comments | EvaluatedKnow Your Chances
This book has been shown in two randomized trials to improve peoples' understanding of risk in the context of health care choices.
| 0 Comments | EvaluatedFast Stats to explain absolute risk, relative risk and Number Needed to Treat (NNT).
A 15-slide presentation on ‘Fast Stats’ to explain absolute risk, relative risk and Number Needed to Treat (NNT) prepared by PharmedOut.
| 0 CommentsUnsubstantiated and overstated claims of efficacy
A 32-slide presentation on misleading advertisements and FDA warnings prepared by PharmedOut.
| 0 Comments2×2 tables and relative risk
A 10-min talk on ‘2x2 tables and Relative Risk’, illustrated by 14 slides, with notes.
| 0 CommentsApplying the evidence
Six key slides produced by the University of Western Australia on applying evidence in practice.
| 0 CommentsDetectives in the classroom
Five modules of materials for promoting epidemiology among high school students.
| 0 CommentsApplying the results of trials and systematic reviews to individual patients
Paul Glasziou uses 28 slides to address ‘Applying the results of trials and systematic reviews to individual patients’.
| 0 CommentsCritical appraisal of clinical trials
Slides developed by Amanda Burls for an interactive presentation covering the most important features of well controlled trials.
| 0 CommentsNo Power, No Evidence!
This blog explains that studies need sufficient statistical power to detect a difference between groups being compared.
| 0 CommentsSample Size matters even more than you think
This blog explains why adequate sample sizes are important, and discusses research showing that sample size may affect effect size.
| 0 CommentsMaking sense of randomized trials
A description of how clinical trials are constructed and analysed to ensure they provide fair comparisons of treatments.
| 0 CommentsMaking sense of results – CASP
This module introduces the key concepts required to make sense of statistical information presented in research papers.
| 0 CommentsMMR: the facts in the case of Dr Andrew Wakefield
This 15-page cartoon explains the events surrounding the MMR controversy, and provides links to the relevant evidence.
| 5 CommentsInterpreting 95% Confidence Intervals
Gilbert Welch’s 9-min video on how 95% confidence intervals relate to p values.
| 0 CommentsDesert Island Medical Journal
Small studies with few outcome events are usually not informative and can be misleading.
| 0 CommentsSpace-Diving Safety
Small studies with few outcome events are usually not informative and can be misleading.
| 0 CommentsOverview of study designs
11 slides and a 4-min commentary overviewing study designs for clinical research. (from Univ Mass Med School).
| 1 CommentP-values and the role of chance
Gilbert Welch’s 10-min video on p-values and assessing the likelihood that a difference between treatments is due to chance.
| 0 CommentsScience fact or fiction? Making sense of cancer stories
A Cancer Research UK blog, explaining how to assess the quality of health claims about cancer.
| 0 CommentsRandomised Controlled Trials vs. Observational Studies
5-minute video explaining the difference between randomised trials and observational studies.
| 0 CommentsHow to read articles about healthcare
This article 'How to read health news behind the headlines', by Dr Alicia White, explains how to assess health claims in the media.
| 0 CommentsIn defence of systematic reviews of small trials
An article discussing the strengths and weaknesses of systematic reviews of small trials.
| 0 CommentsMega-trials
In this 5 min audio resource, Neeraj Bhala discusses systematic reviews and the impact of mega-trials.
| 0 CommentsA poem about regression to the mean
Regression to the mean can lead us to think that an intervention has been effective when it hasn't. This poem illustrates it nicely.
| 0 CommentsWho decides what gets studied?
Clearly this situation is unsatisfactory, so how has it come about? One reason is that what gets studied by researchers […]
| 2 CommentsNo Resources Found
Try clearing your filters or selecting different ones.
Browse by Key Concept
Back to Learning Resources homeJargon buster
About GET-IT
GET-IT provides plain language definitions of health research terms