Reviews of Evidence for Treatments

Systematic reviews of evidence for treatments use comprehensive and explicit methods used to track down, select and determine the quality of relevant research. The information used in reviews usually comes from randomised controlled trials (RCTs), which are analysed using statistical methods (meta-analysis).

Australians now have free access to the online library of the Cochrane Collaboration. The Cochrane Collaboration is a highly respected international collaboration of health professionals, consumers and researchers who prepare reports on the evidence about health care interventions for the Cochrane Library . The National Institute of Clinical Studies funds a national subscription to the library and plays a key role in promoting the use of research evidence in the health care system. The summaries of Cochrane reviews are included in HealthInsite search results and in HealthInsite topic pages.

The Australasian Cochrane Centre is part of the Monash Institute of Health Services Research, located at the Monash Medical Centre, Melbourne, Victoria. The Centre is funded by the Australian Commonwealth Department of Health and Ageing. It is one of a number of Cochrane centres established world-wide to coordinate the activities of the Cochrane Collaboration.

The Centre for Evidence-Based Physiotherapy  (CEBP) is based at the School of Physiotherapy at the University of Sydney. The Centre maintains PEDro, the Physiotherapy Evidence Database.

The Australian Safety and Efficacy Register of New Interventional Procedures - Surgical (ASERNIP-S) provides systematic reviews of the peer-reviewed literature, the establishment and facilitation of clinical audits or trials, the identification of emerging technologies by horizon scanning and the production of clinical practice guidelines. Their aim is to improve the quality of health care through the wide dissemination of evidence-based research to surgeons, health care providers and consumers, both nationally and internationally.

The Joanna Briggs Institute is an initiative of the Royal Adelaide Hospital and the University of Adelaide, recognising the need for a collaborative approach to the evaluation of evidence derived from a diverse range of sources, including experience, expertise and all forms of rigorous research and the translation, transfer and utilisation of the "best available" evidence into health care practice.

The New Zealand Guidelines Group website contains a comprehensive library of medical guidelines, protocols and pathways developed in New Zealand. The site also links to news, events and information on activities in evidence-based practice in New Zealand and internationally.

Follow the links in the list below to information on evidence-based health care, reviews of evidence and organisations working to promote the use of evidence in health care. For information on clinical trials and randomised controlled trials, follow the links to the specific HealthInsite topic page below.

To search HealthInsite for systematic reviews of the evidence for specific treatments, look for topic pages covering the specific condition or for specific Systematic Reviews topic pages under 'S' in the A-Z Health Topics.  

 

Updated October 2007

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Related HealthInsite Topics

Clinical Trials
HealthInsite Topic Page
Links to information about clinical trials, including randomised controlled trials (RCTs).

66 Resources Found
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Title:   CareSearch, palliative care knowledge network
Publisher:   CareSearch
Description:   CareSearch is a website providing palliative care information, evidence and resources. It is designed for patients and carers and for health professionals providing care for people with a terminal illness. All materials are reviewed for quality and relevance.
Date:   Oct 2008

Title:   The Joanna Briggs Institute
Publisher:   The Joanna Briggs Institute
Description:   Brings together a range of practice-oriented research activities to improve the effectiveness of nursing practice and health care outcomes
Date:   Oct 2008

Title:   Physiotherapy Choices: which treatment is best for me?
Publisher:   Centre for Evidence-Based Physiotherapy (CEBP)
Description:   Physiotherapy Choices is a database designed for use by consumers of physiotherapy services, including patients, their friends and families, health service managers, and insurers. The database provides a catalogue of the best research evidence of the effectiveness of physiotherapy interventions.
Date:   Oct 2008

Title:   CEBP. Centre for Evidence-Based Physiotherapy
Publisher:   Centre for Evidence-Based Physiotherapy (CEBP)
Description:   The Centre of Evidence-Based Physiotherapy was established by a small group of clinical and academic physiotherapists. It is based at the School of Physiotherapy at the University of Sydney. The Centre's mission is to maximise the effectiveness of physiotherapy services by facilitating the clinical application of the best available evidence.

Title:   PEDro - The Physiotherapy Evidence Database
Publisher:   Centre for Evidence-Based Physiotherapy (CEBP)
Description:   PEDro is the Physiotherapy Evidence Database. It has been developed to give rapid access to bibliographic details and abstracts of randomised controlled trials, systematic reviews and evidence-based clinical practice guidelines in physiotherapy.
Date:   Oct 2008

Title:   Australasian Cochrane Centre
Publisher:   Australasian Cochrane Centre
Description:   The Australasian Cochrane Centre is one of a number of Cochrane centres established worldwide to co-ordinate the activities of the Cochrane Collaboration. It is part of the Monash Institute of Health Services Research, Melbourne. and is funded by the Australian Commonwealth Department of Health and Ageing.
Date:   Aug 2008

Title:   Communicable Diseases Network Australia - Conferences
Publisher:   Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing
Description:   The Communicable Diseases Control conferences are held biennially.
Date:   May 2008

Title:   CareSearch grey literature
Publisher:   CareSearch
Description:   The CareSearch Grey Literature databases capture four sets of Australian information and evidence that may otherwise be missing from the knowledge base for palliative care  conference abstracts, non-indexed journals articles, theses and government reports.
Date:   May 2008

Title:   Reducing evidence-practice gaps
Publisher:   CareSearch
Description:   Moving evidence into use and reducing evidence-practice gaps is a complex task that requires input from many different groups including researchers, clinicians, consumers and policy makers.
Date:   May 2008

Title:   Communicating evidence
Publisher:   CareSearch
Description:   There is increasing recognition of the need to make sure that research findings are not only made available but are actually used. Planning to disseminate and communicate progress and findings is becoming part of the research cycle although the most effective strategies are still unclear.
Date:   May 2008

Title:   About evidence
Publisher:   CareSearch
Description:   Palliative care is a rapidly evolving, multidisciplinary field of practice. The types of evidence and knowledge produced within palliative care are accordingly varied and encompass many different types of research methodologies.
Date:   May 2008

Title:   About CareSearch
Publisher:   CareSearch
Description:   CareSearch is an online resource consolidating evidence based and quality information for various groups within the palliative care community. The website has been funded by the Australian Government as part of the National Palliative Care Program.
Date:   Apr 2008

Title:   PubMed topic searches
Publisher:   CareSearch
Description:   Follow these links to run real-time PubMed searches. They give you a broad entry point into the relevant English, palliative care related literature.
Date:   Apr 2008

Title:   Finding evidence
Publisher:   CareSearch
Description:   Searching for published research literature in any discipline requires skills and knowledge about where and how to search. Searching for palliative care literature offers particular challenges.
Date:   Apr 2008

Title:   Secondary Lymphoedema Initiative
Publisher:   National Breast and Ovarian Cancer Centre (NBOCC)
Description:   The National Breast and Ovarian Cancer Centre (NBOCC) was awarded a grant by the Australian Government in June 2007 to undertake a 12-month program to improve the knowledge and management of secondary lymphoedema following treatment for all cancers.
Date:   Apr 2008

Title:   Media release. Government to fund wound management research
Publisher:   Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing
Description:   The Australian Government has announced research projects worth up to $500,000 to improve wound management in aged care.
Date:   Apr 2008

Title:   HRT in the early menopause: scientific evidence and common perceptions
Publisher:   The Jean Hailes Foundation for Women's Health
Description:   Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) remains the first-line and most effective treatment for menopausal symptoms.
Date:   Mar 2008

Title:   Conducting research in palliative care
Publisher:   CareSearch
Description:   Research evidence can inform direct patient care, its delivery and organisation. As a multidisciplinary field, there are many different types of questions that need to be investigated in palliative care.
Date:   Mar 2008

Title:   Interpreting risks and ratios in therapy trials
Publisher:   Australian Prescriber
Description:   In randomised trials and systematic reviews of trials, the effects of new treatments on dichotomous outcomes can be expressed in several ways including relative risk, absolute risk, odds ratio and hazard ratio.
Date:   Feb 2008

Title:   Evidence v access - joint replacement registry success
Publisher:   Consumers' Health Forum of Australia (CHF)
Description:   The National Joint Replacement Registry provides the evidence clinicians need to make informed decisions that have led to a better revision rate that has saved consumers - and the health care system - pain, time and money.
Date:   Oct 2007
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