SA4F2 Half Unit
Principles of Evidence-Based Medicine and Clinical Trials (modular)
This information is for the 2013/14 session.
Teacher responsible
Dr C Rudisill COW 3.05
In addition, Professor Allan Hackshaw (Deputy Director, Cancer Research UK and UCL Cancer Trials Centre, UCL) will be teaching on this course.
Availability
This course is available on the MSc in Health Economics, Policy and Management. This course is not available as an outside option.
Course content
Health claims are frequently reported in the media, and it can be difficult to determine which is based on reliable evidence and which is not. With a large amount of research being conducted, it is essential to be able to interpret study results and conclusions correctly, in order to change clinical practice or develop public health policy. This is achieved by Evidence-Based Medicine. The module will enable students to evaluate risk factors for disease or early death, and methods of disease prevention, detection, or treatment.
The module will provide students with practical skills in the following key areas:
- Understanding the different types of research that can be conducted in humans and their strengths and limitations, ie observational studies and a focus on clinical trials.
- Familiarity with systematic reviews (ie how several studies are combined).
- Interpreting research results and conclusions using aspects of epidemiology and medical statistics, and how to communicate study findings.
- Reading and understanding published journal articles or pharmaceutical company reports.
- Examining the efficacy and safety of health care interventions (an important part of a complete health economic evaluation within a clinical trial), including how to target treatments in subgroups of patients.
Teaching
10 interactive seminars/workshops, each 2-3 hours long.
Formative coursework
Students will be given a set of exercises before the course begins, via Moodle. The tutor will go over some of these during the contact week, and address any queries from the students. However, detailed answers are provided to all exercises, so the students can access these if they undertake any of the exercises after the week. The tutor is also available for one-to-one email contact with any student.
Indicative reading
Hackshaw A. A concise guide to clinical trials. BMJ Books, Wiley-Blackwell, first edition 2009.
Greenhalgh T. How to Read a Paper: The Basics of Evidence-Based Medicine. BMJ Books, Wiley-Blackwell, fourth edition, 2010.
Students will be given access to essential readings before the course begins through the pre-sessional reading programme on Moodle.
Assessment
There will be two pieces of coursework based on (i) a clinical trial of an intervention and (ii) a risk/causal factor, in the form of:
• a written assignment in the form of a PowerPoint slide deck (about 25 slides) and a statement of 400 words of conclusion, based on a published paper and associated media news article of the paper (50%)
• 4-5 questions specific to a published paper with answers requiring 1-2 paragraphs each (one question involving writing a media news article of 400-500 words) (50%).
Student performance results
(2010/11 - 2011/12 combined)
Classification | % of students |
---|---|
Distinction | 40.6 |
Merit | 31.2 |
Pass | 18.8 |
Fail | 9.4 |
Key facts
Department: Social Policy
Total students 2012/13: Unavailable
Average class size 2012/13: Unavailable
Value: Half Unit