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Cover image for Clinical research methods for surgeons
Title:
Clinical research methods for surgeons
Publication Information:
Totowa, NJ : Humana Press Inc., 2007.
Physical Description:
xiv, 336 p. : ill., digital ; 26 cm.
ISBN:
9781597452304
General Note:
Available in online version
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Electronic Access:
Full Text
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EB001065 EB 001065 Electronic Book 1:EBOOK
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Summary

Summary

With his keen analytical mind and penchant for organization, Charles Darwin would have made an excellent clinical investigator. Unfortunately for surgery, his early exposure at Edinburgh to the brutality of operations in 1825 convinced him to reject his father's plan for his career and pursue his interest in nature. His subsequent observations of how environmental pressures shaped the development of new species provided the essential mechanism to explain evolution and the disappearance of those species that failed to adapt. Today, surgeons face the same reality as new technology, progressive regulation by government and payers, medico-legal risks, and public demands for proof of performance force changes in behavior that our predecessors never imagined. We know that surgeons have always prided themselves on accurate documentation of their results, including their complications and deaths, but observational studies involving a single surgeon or institution have given way to demands for controlled interventional trials despite the inherent difficulty of studying surgical patients by randomized, blinded techniques. That is why this book is so timely and important. In a logical and comprehensive approach, the authors have assembled a group of experienced clinical scientists who can demonstrate the rich variety of techniques in epidemiology and statistics for reviewing existing publications, structuring a clinical study, and analyzing the resulting data.


Table of Contents

Eugene H. BlackstoneDavid F. PensonJudith Fine and Peter C. AlbertsenDavid A. Axelrod and Rodney HaywardMichael P. PorterDeborah P. LubeckWilliam G. Henderson and Shukri F. KhuriDavid Etzioni and Nadia Howlader and Ruth EtzioniRodney L. Dunn and John T. WeiDavid C. Miller and Rodney L. Dunn and John T. WeiAndrew L. Rosenberg and MaryLou V. H. Greenfield and Justin B. DimickAruna V. Sarma and Julie C. McLaughlinMark S. LitwinArvin Koruthu George and Martin G. SandaJessica B. O'Connell and Clifford Y. KoLynn StothersDonna L. Berry and Sally L. Maliski and William J. EllisTimothy J. Wilt and Howard A. Fink
Forewordp. vii
Prefacep. ix
Contributorsp. xiii
Part I Building a Foundation for Clinical Research
1 Planning the Researchp. 3
2 Ethical Issues in Clinical Researchp. 31
3 Budget Development and Staffingp. 47
Part II Clinical Research Design and Statistical Techniques
4 Nonrandomized Interventional Study Designs (Quasi-Experimental Designs)p. 63
5 Randomized Clinical Trials of Surgical Proceduresp. 77
6 Use of Observational Databases (Registries) in Researchp. 95
7 Risk Adjustmentp. 105
8 Basic Statistical Methodsp. 123
9 Survival Analysesp. 141
10 Assessing the Performance and Validity of Diagnostic Tests and Screening Programsp. 157
11 Secondary Data Analysesp. 175
Part III Outcome Measurement
12 Traditional Outcome Measuresp. 203
13 Health-Related Quality of Lifep. 237
14 Measuring Patient Satisfactionp. 253
Part IV Special Topics in Surgical Clinical Research
15 Quality of Carep. 269
16 Cost-Effectiveness Analysesp. 283
17 Qualitative Research Techniquesp. 297
18 Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysesp. 311
Indexp. 327
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