sábado, 19 de mayo de 2012

Understanding Medical Research: MedlinePlus

HERE ►
Understanding Medical Research: MedlinePlus

 
A service of the U.S. National Library of Medicine
From the National Institutes of HealthNational Institutes of Health

Understanding Medical Research


It seems to happen almost every day - you hear about a new result of medical research on television or read about it in the paper. Sometimes the results of one study seem to disagree with the results of another study.
It's important to be critical when reading or listening to reports of new medical findings. Some questions that can help you evaluate health information include:
  • Was the study in animals or people?
  • Does the study include people like you?
  • Was it a randomized controlled clinical trial?
  • Where was the research done?
  • If a new treatment was being tested, were there side effects?
  • Who paid for the research?
  • Who is reporting the results?
NIH: National Institutes of Health

Photograph of a microscope

Related Topics

05/13/2012 08:00 PM EDT

The next time a headline tells of a sharp fall in measles deaths around the world, or an increase in those on treatment for HIV, or the shifting of the burden of cancer, spare a thought for the number-crunchers behind such far-reaching data.
Source: Reuters Health

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario