Posts Tagged ‘articles’

Questionable research: Don’t genuflect at Cochrane

Friday, November 5th, 2010

Above is an evidence-based practice pyramid (Creative Commons licensed) from the University of Washington Health Sciences Libraries page about evidence-based practice resources.

For those not familiar with the EBP pyramid, it is a tool used to teach about research articles in medicine with the most relevant to clinical care towards the top (Cochrane Library and then other systematic reviews of the literature) and least clinically relevant towards the bottom (clinical reference texts, case studies etc). I learned about this approach to research when I was studying health informatics in school and didn’t really give it a second thought. This Is The Way It Is and makes logical sense.

Lately I have really been rethinking that gold Cochrane capstone after the Pacific Northwest Chapter of the Medical Library Association (PNC/MLA) meeting in Portland last month.

Dr. Erick Turner’s presentation during the meeting of Selective Publication and Drug Efficacy: Don’t Believe Everything You (Don’t) Read (My Notes, His Slides) is a must-read for medical librarians and others concerned about pharmaceutical research and evidence-b(i!)ased medicine. The presentation gives much more background (charts in the slides) than what was published in the book Unhinged with the information about Turner and his work. The review documents for eight of the twelve antidepressants discussed are housed online in the Oregon Health & Science University Digital Resources Library.

At the end of his presentation one of the first questions asked was about the significance of this information for systematic reviews. He replied along the lines of (from my notes)

We use Cochrane as a search method, people genuflect at that name, but all the unpublished trials were missed. Starting point is published literature, FDA reviews are grey literature. Instead, he goes to the grey literature first to identify a cohort of pre-marketing trials then goes to published results to find them which misses post-marketing trials but questions spun factor.

Definitely read my notes or the presentation slides to get the full context of the spin factor since it’s pretty extreme.

Another Medical Librarian Perspective Along the Same Lines

Why Health Sciences Librarians Should Challenge the Flaws of the Peer Review System by Marcus Banks.

We seem to be on a similar wavelength questioning that which is currently seen as sacrosanct:

Yet, despite the recent provenance and pedestrian function of “peer review,” those two words have become holy totems among researchers and librarians.  In our classes we make sure to point students to the checkbox in various databases that limits to peer reviewed journals.  We extol peer reviewed research and excoriate Wikipedia.  And so on and so forth, all in the belief that “peer review” leads people to wonderfully validated, scientifically rigorous, and profoundly accurate research.

Oh, how it doesn’t. But we’re librarians so what can we do about it? Plenty as he suggests:

If we assume that the peer review system is structurally flawed, what should librarians do about it? Here are some options, arranged from least to most attractive:

  • Worst: Continue to glorify the peer review system
  • Better but still bad: Stop the glorification but go no further
  • Better and now good: Vocally discuss the challenges of peer review system on campus
  • Best: Formally challenge funding models/priorities at NIH and elsewhere that sustain peer review flaws.  If funding streams shift behavior change will follow

Many people would say that the best option isn’t for librarians–for policy types and researchers, maybe, but not for us.  We are here to serve, not to challenge.  I disagree, respectfully and yet strongly.  MLA’s Code of Ethics for Health Sciences Librarianship states that one of our roles is to facilitate “informed health care decisions.”  How can we ethically do this if we know that peer review has systemic flaws?

Indeed.

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Good online health information article in the Costco magazine

Monday, December 28th, 2009

Edit: Forgot to mention the three Tools to get started online aka recommended websites were MedlinePlus, Healthfinder and the Medical Library Association (“can we remove the quotation marks, please?”)

Much to my surprise, there is a great little gem in the January 2010 Costco Connection that also contains plenty of health and nutrition articles, as is expected with all of us making New Year’s resolutions.

On page 39 of the print edition and page 42 online, The Doctor is In(ternet) is neither buried in the depths (99 print/121 online pages) nor lengthy and includes a eye-catching graphic of an Rx sign, stethoscope, monitor & mouse to indicate online health information.

The article begins with a paragraph about Costco members finding health information online to initially counter what their doctor said (a predictable hook), but the next is a quote from Susannah Fox from Pew Internet referring to the internet as ‘an incredible information vending machine’ and the fact that 61% of American adults on it are looking for health information. The specific source wasn’t cited in this article but it’s from the June 11, 2009 Social Life of Health Information report.

The next paragraph was the unexpected kicker for me: introducing the Medical Library Association (MLA)! I’m not all that sure about the content though, does anyone know what the exact MLA source information is for what was ‘found’ below? Edit: Connie herself does, thanks for commenting! The phrasing seems to indicate a study of some sort and the tutorial for health reporters is way out of date (hint, hint MLA…) nor does the surveys & studies page seem applicable.

The Medical Library Association (MLA), a nonprofit organization of health-sciences information professionals, found that people who are more knowledgeable about their health conditions are better healthcare consumers and tend to be happier about their medical experience. Connie Schardt, president of the MLA, advises that you access the Internet before or after seeing your doctor or to gather information on something like the swine flu.

It’s the lack of quotes that concerns me a little since Connie is quoted later on with “Always check more than one site. If the information from multiple sites is consistent, it’s an indication that the information is good.” That definitely sounds like her & the rest of us who are part of MLA since we usually steer clear of that ‘advise’ word.

The quote was included under the  ‘Hone your navigation skills’ header, along with the hallmarks of quality health information online: use unbiased sources, use caution with private sites trying to sell you something, and (my favorite that nobody does) Be sure to check out ‘About Us’ links or try to determine who is actually sponsoring a site and consider if they have a hidden agenda.

Taking it a step beyond traditional health webpages, the next header is ‘Social medical networks’ covering information about sites like PatientsLikeMe.com, Google Health and Microsoft Health Vault, and ending with

And, with the rapid growth of smart phone apps and wireless access, medical information is certain to be on call more than ever.

Indeed it is. What are we as medical librarians and as an organization doing to meet mobile user needs? The webcast to explain and raise awareness is a start, and I’m inspired by the North Carolina State University Libraries’ mobile website m.lib.ncsu.edu and their fantastic promo video.

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