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Evidence Based Practice

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The art of therapy is developed through clinical experience ... The science behind therapy is needed to facilitate and guide clinical reasoning ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Evidence Based Practice


1
Evidence Based Practice
2
What is Evidence Based Practice?
  • Using research literature to identify the current
    best evidence for a treatment intervention
  • Using this evidence to provide the best possible
    treatment intervention for the client

3
Why is Evidence Based Practice Needed?
  • OT is both an art and a science
  • The art of therapy is developed through clinical
    experience
  • But art must be justified by science
  • The science behind therapy is needed to
    facilitate and guide clinical reasoning
  • Sound clinical reasoning is necessary to justify
    treatment outcomes

4
This is the Age of Accountability
  • High cost of therapy means that therapy has to be
    efficient and effective
  • No time to waste on ineffective treatment
  • Therapists are held accountable for treatment
    outcomes
  • Must be able to justify your treatment
    intervention in order to get paid

5
Most Importantits the right thing to do
  • Would you want a loved one or yourself to be
    given unproven therapy?

6
Evidence base is integrated into practice through
5 steps
  • Write down a clinical question
  • Gather current published evidence that might
    answer the question
  • Evaluate the gathered evidence to determine the
    best evidence for answering the question
  • Communicate with the client and colleagues about
    the evidence as clinical decision are being made
  • Evaluate the chosen evidence based procedures as
    they are being implemented and revise and
    individualize as needed
  • Tickle-Degnen, 2000

7
Formulating the clinical question
  • Questions usually surface while working with the
    client ( or observing a treatment session)
  • Why is this treatment technique being used?
  • Would treatment X be more effective?
  • Could this treatment be used with X diagnosis?
  • Which evaluation would be most effective in
    identifying the clients problems?

8
Qualities of a Good Research Question
  • Well written question is critical to completing
    the evidence gathering process
  • Refines the literature search
  • Question should be specific but not so specific
    that sufficient literature cannot be found
  • Example-what is the role of occupational therapy
    in working with urban dwelling male teenagers
    with fragile X syndrome within the middle school
    setting?

9
Question Qualities
  • Concise questions are best
  • Wordiness confuses both writer and reader
  • But question must contain sufficient information
    to guide the search
  • Example What is vestibular stimulation?
  • Doesnt provide enough key words to narrow the
    focus of the search
  • Better Is vestibular stimulation an effective
    treatment intervention for children with autism
  • Key words include vestibular stimulation,
    treatment intevnetion, children, autism

10
Question Qualities
  • Questions that are worded too broadly can created
    super-sized lit reviews
  • What type of visual perceptual deficits are
    associated with brain injury?
  • Typing in the two key words-visual perceptual
    deficit and brain injury will yield 600 articles
  • Better question do persons display visual
    scanning deficits following hemispherial CVA?

11
Completing the Literature Review
  • Articles reviewed should have the following
    qualities
  • 1.The study investigates an outcome variable that
    is relevant to the selected treatment
    intervention (for example if your treatment
    intervention is training persons to use bioptic
    lenses in driving, then the outcome variable must
    be success in resuming or beginning driving).

12
Article Qualities
  • 2.The study assessed the outcome variable in a
    manner that is valid and reliable (for example,
    if the outcome variable in criteria 1 is success
    in resuming driving then rated performance on a
    behind-the-wheel test or obtaining a license
    would be valid measures but asking the persons
    opinion of whether he/she was satisfied with the
    training is not valid or reliable).

13
Article Qualities
  • 3.Study participants include members of the
    population identified to receive the treatment
    intervention. For example, if your treatment
    intervention addresses carpal tunnel syndrome,
    then literature that addresses tendon transplants
    would not be appropriate.

14
Article Qualities
  • 4.The study was designed to rule out
    non-intervention explanations of the studys
    outcome. The study shows evidence of control for
    factors that might affect measured outcomes such
    as use of control groups, blind designs, random
    assignment of subjects, etc.
  • Literature published in peer reviewed journals is
    more likely to use higher quality research
    designs but not always
  • All studies should show evidence of study
    controls
  • Asking a persons opinion on whether the
    treatment was effective is NOT quality research!

15
Article Quality
  • Most areas of treatment intervention are very
    dynamic
  • Intervention approaches change as new information
    is discovered
  • The majority of articles comprising any
    literature review should have been published with
    the last 10 years
  • If an area has been blessed with a lot of
    research investigation, look for articles that
    synthesize the research ( those employing
    meta-analysis are best)

16
How is Evidence Based Practice Carried Out?
  • By carefully observing client outcomes and not
    being afraid to question current practice
  • By subscribing to peer reviewed journals relevant
    to your practice area
  • By regularly attending continuing education
    venues
  • Good ones will provide a bibliography of the
    research used to develop the course
  • By conducting literature reviews to answer
    clinical questions

17
Incorporating EB into practice cont..
  • By joining an internet listserv for your area of
    practice
  • By organizing or joining a professional study or
    journal group
  • By obtaining practice guidelines for treatment
    areas from AOTA or other reputable organizations

18
Guidelines for Completing the Literature Review
for the Portfolio
19
Purpose of Completing the Literature Review
  • To demonstrate that you (the student) are able to
    pose and develop a clinical question and then
    answer it by reviewing the research literature

20
Criteria for Selection of the Topic
  • Must be relevant to the practice of occupational
    therapy
  • Must address an aspect of evaluation or treatment
    intervention

21
Literature Requirements
  • A minimum of 10 articles
  • All articles must be published in peer-reviewed
    journals
  • Articles appearing in the popular press (Newsweek
    etc.) or trade publications (OT Advance or OT
    Practice) are not acceptable
  • Websites can not be used
  • All articles must be published within the last 10
    years (exceptions approved by the advisor)
  • Full text articles must be reviewed
  • Abstracts are not acceptable

22
Components of the Literature Review
  • There are three parts to the literature review
  • Part 1. Clinical research question
  • Use criteria previously discussed to formulate
    the question
  • In addition provide a reason why thus particular
    question was selected

23
Literature Review Components
  • Part 2Review of the related research
  • Articles should provide direct evidence for or
    against the clinical question
  • After reading the articles, identify the major
    concepts supported by the articles
  • Write
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