Authors
M Hassan Murad, Celia Fiordalisi, Jennifer Pillay, Timothy J Wilt, Elizabeth O’Connor, Leila Kahwati, Adrian V Hernandez, Carolyn M Rutter, Roger Chou, Ethan M Balk, Dale W Steele, Ian J Saldanha, Orestis A Panagiotou, Stephanie Chang, Martha Gerrity
Publication date
2021/1
Source
Journal of general internal medicine
Volume
36
Pages
196-199
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Description
Accurately describing treatment effects using plain language and narrative statements is a critical step in communicating research findings to end users. However, the process of developing these narratives has not been historically guided by a specific framework. The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Evidence-based Practice Center Program developed guidance for narrative summaries of treatment effects that identifies five constructs. We explicitly identify these constructs to facilitate developing narrative statements: (1) direction of effect, (2) size of effect, (3) clinical importance, (4) statistical significance, and (5) strength or certainty of evidence. These constructs clearly overlap. It may not always be feasible to address all five constructs. Based on context and intended audience, investigators can determine which constructs will be most important to address in narrative statements.
Total citations
202220232024421
Scholar articles
MH Murad, C Fiordalisi, J Pillay, TJ Wilt, E O'Connor… - Journal of general internal medicine, 2021