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Postgraduate Journal Club
GENERAL RESOURCES:
Useful papers to get you started:
EDUCATION AND DEBATE
How to read a paper: Papers that summarise other papers (systematic reviews
and meta-analyses)
Trisha Greenhalgh
BMJ 1997; 315: 672-675.
CORRECTIONS
How to read a paper: Papers that report diagnostic or screening tests
BMJ 1997; 315: 942.
EDUCATION AND DEBATE
How to read a paper: Papers that go beyond numbers (qualitative research)
Trisha Greenhalgh and Rod Taylor
BMJ 1997; 315: 740-743.
EDUCATION AND DEBATE
How to read a paper: Papers that tell you what things cost (economic analyses)
Trisha Greenhalgh
BMJ 1997; 315: 596-599.
EDUCATION AND DEBATE
How to read a paper: Papers that report diagnostic or screening tests
Trisha Greenhalgh
BMJ 1997; 315: 540-543.
EDUCATION AND DEBATE
How to read a paper: Papers that report drug trials
Trisha Greenhalgh
BMJ 1997; 315: 480-483.
EDUCATION AND DEBATE
How to read a paper: Assessing the methodological quality of published papers
Trisha Greenhalgh
BMJ 1997; 315: 305-308.
EDUCATION AND DEBATE
How to read a paper : getting your bearings (deciding what the paper is about)
Trisha Greenhalgh
BMJ 1997; 315: 243-246.
MEDICINE AND BOOKS
How to Read a Paper: The Basics of Evidence Based Medicine, by Trisha Greenhalgh
David C Slawson
BMJ 1997; 315: 891.
EDUCATION AND DEBATE
How to read a paper: Statistics for the non-statistician. II: "Significant"
relations and their pitfalls
Trisha Greenhalgh
BMJ 1997; 315: 422-425.
EDUCATION AND DEBATE
How to read a paper: Statistics for the non-statistician. I: Different types
of data need different statistical tests
Trisha Greenhalgh
BMJ 1997; 315: 364-366.
EDUCATION AND DEBATE
How to read a paper: The Medline database
Trisha Greenhalgh
BMJ 1997; 315: 180-183.
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