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Challenges for evidence-based physical therapy: accessing and interpreting high-quality evidence on therapy.


Evidence-based practice is defined as the "integration of the best research evidence with clinical expertise and patient values." (1(pl)) Within the international physical therapy community there is growing acceptance of this approach, which we refer to as evidence-based physical therapy.

Evidence-based physical therapy has become feasible with the enormous increase, in recent years, in the volume and accessibility of high-quality clinical research. One measure of the growth of evidence is that the Physiotherapy physiotherapy: see physical therapy.  Evidence Database (PEDro) (http://www. pedro.fhs.usyd.cdu.au/) now contains 398 evidence-based clinical practice guidelines clinical practice guidelines Clinical policies, practice guidelines, practice parameters, practice policies Medtalk Systematically developed statements to assist practitioner and Pt decisions about appropriate health care for specific clinical circumstances. See Psychology. , 3,920 randomized controlled trials A randomized controlled trial (RCT) is a scientific procedure most commonly used in testing medicines or medical procedures. RCTs are considered the most reliable form of scientific evidence because it eliminates all forms of spurious causality.  (RCTs), and 713 systematic reviews that are relevant to the practice of physical therapy, 47% of which have been published since 1998 (based on a search of PEDro conducted on February 11, 2004).

It may be that developments in clinical practice have not kept pace with the increase in availability of evidence and that physical therapist practice has not changed as much as it might. Several studies (2-5) have examined the use of evidence by physical therapists in clinical decision making over the past decade. A review of these studies indicates that much practice is still not evidence-based.

There are many reasons why research evidence may not translate into evidence-based physical therapy. These reasons include current health policies, the complexity of physical therapist practice, incomplete access to the evidence, difficulty interpreting the evidence, organizational barriers, and ineffectual continuing education continuing education: see adult education.
continuing education
 or adult education

Any form of learning provided for adults. In the U.S. the University of Wisconsin was the first academic institution to offer such programs (1904).
 programs. (6)

This article focuses on those barriers to evidence-based physical therapy that relate to access and interpretation of evidence. For simplicity, we have chosen to consider access to and interpretation of evidence only on the effects of interventions, and we ignore issues relating to relating to relate prepconcernant

relating to relate prepbezüglich +gen, mit Bezug auf +acc 
 implementation of evidence about other sorts of clinical questions (such as questions about diagnostic tests, prognosis, and so on). We restrict discussion to RCTs and systematic reviews of RCTs because these study designs provide the best evidence on the effectiveness of physical therapy interventions. (7) An RCT RCT Randomized Controlled Trial
RCT Regimental Combat Team (infantry regiment with their own artillery, engineers, medical and tanks)
RCT Rollercoaster Tycoon
RCT Randomized Clinical Trial
RCT Rhondda Cynon Taff
 is a study in which patients are randomly assigned to groups that do or do not receive the intervention of interest. A systematic review is a summary of literature that uses explicit methods designed to minimize bias in the location, appraisal, or synthesis of evidence on a review topic.

Access to Results of RCTs and Systematic Reviews

In the ideal world, the evidence-based practitioner would have immediate access to the results of all RCTs and systematic reviews at the point of patient care. This, of course, is not the current situation. There are a number of barriers to making evidence available to physical therapists. Completed studies may not have been published, published studies may be difficult to identity or retrieve, and relevant studies may not be available in the language of the user. These issues are discussed below.

Publication Bias

Inspection of the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials controlled trial Clinical research A clinical study in which one group of participants receives an experimental drug while the other receives either a placebo or an approved–'gold standard' therapy. See Blinding, Double-blinded.  reveals that many RCTs in physical therapy are completed but never published. This is problematic because the likelihood of publication is related to trial findings. Medical trials with "negative results" (nonsignificant non·sig·nif·i·cant  
adj.
1. Not significant.

2. Having, producing, or being a value obtained from a statistical test that lies within the limits for being of random occurrence.
 results or small effect sizes) are less likely to be published (8) or have a greater time lag to publication (8-10) than studies with positive results. Three studies (8, 11, 12) that reviewed publication outcomes of trials submitted to ethics committees ethics committee A multidisciplinary hospital body composed of a broad spectrum of personnel–eg, physicians, nurses, social workers, priests, and others, which addresses the moral and ethical issues within the hospital. See DNR, Institutional review board.  have each shown that publication is more likely if effects are large and statistically significant. Egger and colleagues (13) estimated that the odds of publication are 2.4 times greater if results are statistically significant. Preferential publication of studies with significant results is problematic because it means that readers of clinical trials see an unrepresentatively positive subset of trials. As a consequence, readers may be inclined to form unrealistically optimistic op·ti·mist  
n.
1. One who usually expects a favorable outcome.

2. A believer in philosophical optimism.



op
 opinions of the effects of interventions. This is termed "publication bias."

The causes of publication bias are not well understood. Rosentha1 (14) called publication bias the "file drawer problem In applied statistics, the file drawer problem results from the fact that academics tend not to publish results that indicate the null hypothesis could not be rejected. That is, they got a statistically non-significant result that failed to find the relationship they were looking ." This term suggests that researchers choose not to report negative studies. The implication is that the source of the problem is with the individual researcher. There is some evidence that researchers are less likely to submit negative studies for publication. (15, 16) However, the responsibility also may lie with editors and journal reviewers. Mahoney (17) asked reviewers to examine manuscripts with the same experimental procedures but with positive, negative, or mixed results. Positive manuscripts were more likely to be recommended for publication with only minor revisions. Reviewers more frequently rejected or recommended major revisions to negative manuscripts. Those manuscripts with mixed results were rejected consistently.

In some countries, the usual practice is to publish only positive trials. (18, 19) Vickers and colleagues (18) reviewed the published reports of 1,352 controlled clinical trials controlled clinical trial,
n a research strategy that calls for two samples: an experimental sample of patients receiving a pharmaceutical, and a second sample of control patients receiving a placebo.
 and noted that 75% of trials arising from English researchers were positive, whereas Chinese and Russian (or USSR USSR: see Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. ) researchers never reported negative results. Investigators from non-English-language countries are more likely to publish reports of trials in English-language journals if the trial results are positive. Egger and colleagues (20) located 40 pairs of trials, each pair published by one author, where one trial was published in English and the other trial was published in German. Sixty-three percent of English publications reported statistically significant results, whereas this was the case for only 35% of German publications.

We are unaware of any study that has directly investigated publication bias in the physical therapy literature, but there is no reason to suspect that the physical therapy literature is not also subject to publication bias. The consequences of publication bias are not trivial--in our opinion, physical therapy intervention informed by a biased subset of the literature will not be as effective as intervention informed by all of the evidence.

Publication bias could be eliminated if all RCTs (and other sorts of studies) were published promptly, irrespective of irrespective of
prep.
Without consideration of; regardless of.

irrespective of
preposition despite 
 outcome. This will only occur when there is universal acceptance among physical therapist researchers, funding agencies, and journals of the importance of prompt publication of completed trials. It may be possible to reduce the extent of publication bias by mandating prospective registration of clinical trials on registers such as the US clinical trials register (http://www. clinicaltrials.gov) and the United Kingdom's meta-register of controlled trials (http://www.controlled-trials.com). (Incidentally, trials registers also alert researchers to ongoing trials and so avoid unnecessary duplication of effort). However, registration is not yet common practice, (21) and few physical therapy trials are registered. For example, only 52 trials with exercise or other physical therapy interventions are registered on the US clinical trials register (based on a search conducted on April 13, 2003). Ethics committees and funding bodies A funding body is an organisation that provides funds in the form of research grants or scholarships. Research Councils
Research Councils are funding bodies that are government-funded agencies engaged in the support of research in different disciplines and
 could promote more complete registration of trials by linking ethics approval or release of funds to trial registrations.

Prospective registration and prompt publication of the full results of completed trials would potentially improve the quality of evidence used by physical therapists. Publication means that the results are available to clinicians and so can be used to inform clinical decision making. Publication also means that the results of the trial can be considered for inclusion in systematic reviews and evidence-based clinical practice guidelines. In cases where trials are not promptly published, a record on a trial registry may alert a reviewer to the trial's existence. The reviewer can then contact the researcher who conducted the trial to obtain a copy of the trial methods and results and, if the trial is suitable, include the results in the review. Without trial registration, the results of the trial may have been missed.

Indexing Issues

Many physical therapists rely on readily available databases of health care literature (eg, MEDLINE The online medical database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine (NLM) whose parent is the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD. MEDLINE contains millions of articles from thousands of medical journals and publications. The consumer section of the site (http://medlineplus. , CINAHL CINAHL Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature , EMBASE) to access results of relevant research. Of these, only the MEDLINE database is available free of charge to individuals, although many therapists will have free access to CINAHL and EMBASE through institutional subscriptions. These databases index many trials and reviews of importance to physical therapists, but coverage is far from complete. This is because (1) most databases have a start date well after the first physical therapy trial was conducted and (2) the databases do not provide universal coverage of all of the journals that publish physical therapy research.

The earliest trial in physical therapy that we have been able to find is Colebrook's 1929 trial of ultraviolet irradiation irradiation /ir·ra·di·a·tion/ (i-ra?de-a´shun)
1. radiotherapy.

2. the dispersion of nervous impulse beyond the normal path of conduction.

3.
 for prevention of colds, infectious diseases infectious diseases: see communicable diseases. , and chilblains Noun 1. chilblains - inflammation of the hands and feet caused by exposure to cold and moisture
chilblain, pernio

blain - an inflammatory swelling or sore

kibe - ulcerated chilblain on the heel
 and for promoting progress in schoolwork. (22) This may be one of the first randomized ran·dom·ize  
tr.v. ran·dom·ized, ran·dom·iz·ing, ran·dom·iz·es
To make random in arrangement, especially in order to control the variables in an experiment.
 trials ever conducted. Early trials such as Colebrook's trial are not indexed in any of the major literature databases. Although many journals commenced earlier, MEDLINE indexes publications starting from 1966, EMBASE indexes publications starting from 1975 and CINAHL indexes publications starting from 1982. Consequently, all 3 databases miss some physical therapy research. It is difficult to estimate how many trials in physical therapy predate each database, but to obtain a rough estimate we searched PEDro on April 17, 2003, and found that MEDLINE missed 21 trials, EMBASE missed 81 trials, and CINAHL missed 278 trials, solely because these trials were published prior to the coverage of the databases.

Not all databases provide comprehensive coverage of important physical therapy journals. Three studies (23-25) have attempted to identify key physical therapy journals, and, because of the different methods used in those studies, each has produced a slightly different set of key journals. Both the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy (CSP (1) (Certified Systems Professional) An earlier award for successful completion of an ICCP examination in systems development. See ICCP.

(2) (Commerce Service P
) (http://www.csp.org.uk/libraryandinformation/ library/physiotherapycollections/corelist.cfm) in the United Kingdom and the World Confederation for Physical Therapy (WCPT WCPT World Confederation for Physical Therapy ) (http://www.wcpt.org/ programmes/ebp/journals.html) include lists of journals relevant to physical therapy and evidence-based practice on their Web sites. Table 1 summarizes coverage by major databases of key physical therapy journals as identified by the methods used in each study and by the CSP and WCPT. The number of journals identified ranged from 14 to 45. There was some overlap, but each set had at least 2 unique journals. CINAHL indexes 89% of the journals identified by Bohannon (23) and 78% of the journals identified by Wakiji. (24) Other databases appear to have more complete coverage, but in some cases the journals are incompletely indexed and indexing may extend back only a few years.

An example (26) illustrates the poor coverage of the physical therapy literature by CINAHL. The "Evidence in Practice" section in the March 2002 issue of Physical Therapy described a clinical problem related to lymphedema. (27) A search of the CINAHL database retrieved one evidence-based clinical practice guideline and one systematic review, but we believe it missed 6 RCTs indexed on the PEDro database. We present this information not to argue that PEDro is Pedro I (Dom Pedro de Alcântara) (pā`drō), 1798–1834, first emperor of Brazil (1822–31); son of John VI of Portugal.  superior to CINAHL (we are unaware of any direct comparison of the databases with respect to coverage of the physical therapy literature), but to point out that searches of CINAHL can miss high-level evidence on physical therapy intervention.

Physical therapists who want to locate most relevant clinical trials could increase the sensitivity of their searches by searching multiple databases, although this is time-consuming for the busy clinician clinician /cli·ni·cian/ (kli-nish´in) an expert clinical physician and teacher.

cli·ni·cian
n.
. Commercially available software permits simultaneous searching of more than one database. However, even when all 3 of the main medical literature databases (MEDLINE, EMBASE, and CINAHL) are searched, key journals, particularly non-English-language journals, are missed. Physical therapy-specific databases such as PEDro and the American Physical Therapy Association's (APTA's) Hooked on Evidence (http://www.apta.org/hookedonevidence) do not limit entries to certain journals or time periods, so they potentially provide a partial solution to this problem of coverage.

Access to Electronic Databases

As noted earlier, the MEDLINE database is available free of charge to individuals via PubMed (http://www.ncbi. nlm.nih.gov/PubMed/), and many therapists have free access to CINAHL and EMBASE through institutional subscriptions. In addition, many countries now have mechanisms designed to enhance clinicians' access to information. For example, in the United Kingdom the National Electronic Library for Health (http://www. nelh.nhs.uk/) provides access to MEDLINE, CINAHL, The Cochrane Library The Cochrane Library is a collection of databases in medicine and other healthcare specialties provided by the Cochrane Collaboration. At its core is a database of systematic reviews and meta-analyses which summarise and interpret the results of high-quality medical research. , Clinical Evidence, and some databases of guidelines to National Health Service employees. Most states of Australia have similar resources (eg, Clinical Information Access Program in New South Wales New South Wales, state (1991 pop. 5,164,549), 309,443 sq mi (801,457 sq km), SE Australia. It is bounded on the E by the Pacific Ocean. Sydney is the capital. The other principal urban centers are Newcastle, Wagga Wagga, Lismore, Wollongong, and Broken Hill.  [http://www.clininfo.health.nsw. gov.au]). Several countries now provide free access to The Cochrane Library for all residents using National Provision Licenses (http://www.update-software.com/ cochrane/provisions.htm). The PEDro database is available free of charge at http://www.pedro.fhs.usyd.edu.au, and Hooked on Evidence is available to APTA members at http://www.apta.org/hookedonevidence.

Access to Full Text

Searching for and appraising evidence is much easier if the entire journal article (ie, full text) is available online. There is some evidence that articles that are available as full text on the Internet are more likely to be accessed, read, quoted, and probably used in making decisions about patient management than those that are not available as full text. This is referred to as Full Text On the Net bias (FUTON bias FUTON bias stands for 'Full Text On the Net' bias and refers to the failure in academic research, when researchers tend to search and read what is available online, and ignore relevant studies that are available offline in printed format only. ). (28)

At present, most physical therapy journals that provide full-text versions of articles online do so for recent editions only, with a small number doing so for free (Tab. 2). Where full text is available, publishers commonly restrict access to subscribers. There are a number of document delivery companies that provide access to full text from physical therapy journals (eg, see list on http://www.apta.org/Research/factsheet_tips/ howtofindresearch_related, accessed April 16, 2003), but the cost of this access is likely to prevent physical therapists from using this service regularly. Full-text access is often available in hard copies from libraries, but many therapists find that visiting libraries is prohibitively time-consuming. Access may be a greater problem for those working in smaller organizations or in regional areas.

One solution is for professional associations to subscribe on behalf of their members to journals that provide access to full-text articles online. Members of the association could then access the full text of articles in core journals from the association's Web site. Our provisional budget estimates suggest that physical therapy associations may be able to provide full-text access to a range of core journals for just a few dollars per member per year. The Australian Physiotherapy Association will begin offering this service to its members in 2004.

Electronic publication potentially provides a mechanism for providing low-cost access to evidence in developing countries. The World Health Organization's "Access to Research" initiative (http://www.heahhinternetwork.net/) has helped 112 developing countries gain low-cost access to 2,100 journals. The Open Society Institute also provides electronic journal access (http://www.eifl.net/) to over 2,000 institutions in 39 countries.

Language Issues

Many trials are published in languages other than English LOTE or Languages Other Than English is the name given to language subjects at Australian schools. LOTEs have often historically been related to the policy of multiculturalism, and tend to reflect the predominant non-English languages spoken in a school's local area, the . For example, approximately 8% of all randomized trials listed in MEDLINE are in languages other than English. PEDro now contains 236 RCTs and 20 systematic reviews in languages other than English (based on a search of PEDro conducted on April 13, 2003), and there are probably many trials and reviews in languages other than English that are not indexed in PEDro. A recent survey of IJI IJI International Journal of Imaging (India) .ACS (Asynchronous Communications Server) See network access server. , a Latin-American database, located 70 randomized trials published in Portuguese and Spanish (de Freitas A, Herbert R, Latimer J, Ferreira P; unpublished research). Some trials are published in a local language and in English, but it is unclear how common this practice is and, as discussed earlier, it is likely to occur to a greater extent with more positive studies. Thus, therapists who restrict their reading to English-language articles may be unaware of relevant evidence. The situation is likely to be even more acute for physical therapists who read only a language other than English.

Translating reports of existing high-quality trials would solve the language problem but would be associated with substantial costs. Nonetheless, it would be far cheaper, and quicker, to translate non-English-language reports of existing high-quality trials into English than to fund replication of trials by English-speaking physical therapists. Research funding Research funding is a term generally covering any funding for scientific research, in the areas of both "hard" science and technology and social science. The term often connotes funding obtained through a competitive process, in which potential research projects are evaluated and  bodies or professional associations in some countries may consider this to be a cost-effective way of increasing the volume of available research.

Interpretation of the Results of RCTs and Systematic Reviews

Once a trial or review has been accessed, it must then be read and interpreted. This involves critical appraisal Noun 1. critical appraisal - an appraisal based on careful analytical evaluation
critical analysis

appraisal, assessment - the classification of someone or something with respect to its worth
 of the quality of the study design (internal validity Internal validity is a form of experimental validity [1]. An experiment is said to possess internal validity if it properly demonstrates a causal relation between two variables [2] [3]. ) and the applicability of the study to the clinical situation (external validity External validity is a form of experimental validity.[1] An experiment is said to possess external validity if the experiment’s results hold across different experimental settings, procedures and participants. ), and consideration of whether the size of the treatment effect warrants a change in clinical practice. (29, 30) The results of this appraisal process must then be applied to particular patients' circumstances.

Assessing Internal Validity

There are a number of key features of RCTs that have been shown to affect the validity of results (eg, blinding of assessors or patients (13, 31); concealed method of subject allocation to groups (l3, 31, 32). Trials without these design features will tend to show a greater effect of intervention. (13) Our recent survey of 2,297 physical therapy trials revealed that 16% reported using concealed allocation (ie, at enrollment, the investigator is unaware of the group to which the patient will be allocated), 5% reported using blinded outcome assessors (ie, assessors who are unaware of which intervention the patient has received), and 9% reported blinding of patients. (33) The typical randomized trial in physical therapy is potentially seriously biased.

Many health care professionals lack the skills and knowledge needed to discriminate between trials of low and high quality or to correctly interpret trial findings. A survey of general medical practitioners revealed that most did not understand fundamental terms used in evidence-based practice, such as "absolute risk reduction" and "number needed to treat number needed to treat Decision-making The minimum number of Pts to whom a particular intervention must be administered in a trial or controlled study to prevent a single target event. See Absolute risk reduction, Odds ratio, Relative risk reduction, Threshold NNT. ." (34) Jette and colleagues' recent survey of a random sample of 1,000 APTA members (35)' suggests that similar problems exist among physical therapists. Less than 20% of respondents to the survey reported that they understood completely the terms "relative risk," "absolute risk," "odds ratio," and "meta-analysis," and only 55% reported that they were confident in their critical appraisal skills.

Therapists who have difficulty assessing the quality of clinical trials may find the "quality scores" in the PEDro database to be a useful guide. All trials indexed in PEDro have been rated for internal validity and the completeness of statistical reporting using the PEDro scale, an 11-item quality scale. The PEDro scale has demonstrated reliability (36) and is based on the "Delphi list" of trial characteristics thought to be related to trial "quality" by a group of clinical trial experts. (33, 37) Scores for individual items (eg, subject blinding) also are presented. Ratings are used to rank the search results, so users are directed toward trials that are more likely to be valid and that contain sufficient statistical information to be interpretable. PEDro scores, however, can provide only a rough guide to trial quality. They do not take into account all relevant aspects of the design, conduct, and analysis of clinical trials, and they do not necessarily weight scale items optimally. Nonetheless, they may provide some guidance for readers.

Secondary sources of information also may be useful for physical therapists who lack critical appraisal skills. The results of clinical trials are summarized in a number of publications, including the ACP (Associate Computing Professional) The award for successful completion of an examination in computers offered by the ICCP. It is geared to newcomers in the computing field. For more information, visit www.iccp.org.

ACP - Algebra of Communicating Processes
 Journal Club, Evidence-Based Medicine evidence-based medicine Decision-making 'The use of scientific data to confirm that proposed diagnostic or therapeutic procedures are appropriate in light of their high probability of producing the best and most favorable outcome'. See Meta-analysis. , the "Critically Appraised Papers" section in the Australian Journal of Physiotherapy, and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. The first 3 examples distill dis·till
v.
1. To subject a substance to distillation.

2. To separate a distillate by distillation.

3. To increase the concentration of, separate, or purify a substance by distillation.
 the key findings of high-quality RCTs (and other types of studies), usually in one page or less, so they potentially also provide a significant time-saving mechanism for busy physical therapists. Cochrane systematic reviews can generally be considered to provide an unbiased synthesis of the literature because they are performed using stringent guidelines (including the critical appraisal of included trials).

Despite the demonstrated importance of study design in the size of study effects, we do not suggest that the results of suboptimally designed trials always should automatically be discarded. An imperfect trial may still provide more certainty than no trial at all. As such, we have suggested previously (38) that a sensible approach for readers of clinical trials is to base the decision on whether to use the results of a potentially biased study in clinical decision making on the quality of other information that pertains to the clinical question at hand. If no less-biased information exists, the trial may be considered. However, we also note that, in our opinion, "there will usually be little point in reading clinical trials that do not meet basic criteria (true randomisation Noun 1. randomisation - a deliberately haphazard arrangement of observations so as to simulate chance
randomization

organisation, organization - the activity or result of distributing or disposing persons or things properly or methodically; "his organization
, acceptable follow-up, and blinding where possible)." (38(p205))

In some trials, key features conferring internal validity may have been incorporated into the trial design, but these features are not reported when the trial is published. The reporting of RCTs could be improved by a greater use of the CONSORT statement CONSORT statement

a research tool that uses an evidence-based approach to improve the quality of reports of randomized trials.
 (39) (http://www. consort-statement.org/). The CONSORT statement comprises a checklist of key components of a trial's design, conduct, and analysis and a diagram for reporting the flow of subjects through the trial. This ensures key components are not omitted when researchers report their methods and data, which can improve the quality of reports of RCTs. As of January 29, 2003, 68 journals insist on use of the CONSORT statement when submitting trial reports for publication, but the CONSORT statement is yet to be adopted as policy by most physical therapy journals. Of the 84 key physical therapy journals identified by Bohannon, (23) Wakiji, (24) and Maher and colleagues, (25) 14 have adopted the CONSORT statement. A similar statement, the QUOROM statement, has been developed to improve the reporting of systematic reviews of RCTs. (40)

Systematic reviews provide an efficient way to access evidence on therapy because a single review can summarize the results of many single RCTs. However, there are a number of key features of systematic reviews that have been shown to influence the results. The search strategies used to identify relevant RCTs, (41-43) the method of assessing RCT quality, (44, 45) and the method used to pool individual RCT results (46) can all dramatically affect the conclusions of systematic reviews. This point is well illustrated by Ferreira and colleagues' (46) reanalysis of 6 Cochrane reviews that used a system for pooling levels of evidence. Pooling is where the results of several studies are combined and summarized quantitatively. The authors found that the conclusion of a review could change dramatically depending on what levels of evidence system was used for pooling. For example, the 4 pooling systems produced the following conclusions for back schools: strong evidence that back schools are effective, weak evidence that back schools are effective, limited evidence that back schools are effective, and no evidence that back schools are effective.

Assessing Applicability

It may be difficult to find a trial in which the sample characteristics and the frequency and exact method of administration of intervention match one's own practice. Differences between the characteristics of a study and the physical therapist's own practice can lead the therapist to disregard the results of relevant research. This may be appropriate if the closest research involves patients with completely different pathology or physiology. Results of a trial also may not be applicable if the intended patient has comorbidities that contraindicate con·tra·in·di·cate
v.
To indicate the inadvisability of something, such as a medical treatment.
 the therapy. (1) However, where the differences are less major, well-designed trials should not be discarded in favor of clinical experience alone. A more sensible approach may he to use relevant research to predict the treatment effect and to adjust that prediction according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 clinical experience. (29, 47) For example, a trial by Moyer-Mileur and colleagues (48) showed that daily range-of-motion exercises in preterm infants preterm infant
n.
An infant born before the 37th week of gestation.


preterm infant Premature infant, see there
 with very low birth weights improved growth rates Growth Rates

The compounded annualized rate of growth of a company's revenues, earnings, dividends, or other figures.

Notes:
Remember, historically high growth rates don't always mean a high rate of growth looking into the future.
 and measures of bone mineralization Mineralization
The process by which the body uses minerals to build bone structure.

Mentioned in: Rickets

mineralization,
n the bioprecipitation of an inorganic substance.
. Infants were enrolled in the study at a mean of 2.2 weeks after birth, and all were tolerating enteral enteral /en·ter·al/ (en´ter'l) enteric.

en·ter·al
adj.
1. Within or by way of the intestine, as distinguished from parenteral.

2. Enteric.
 feeding. We might anticipate slightly better outcomes than those reported by Moyer-Mileur and colleagues if the exercise regimen were commenced sooner after birth. Conversely, a smaller treatment effect might be anticipated in an infant who is not tolerating enteral feeding.

Another issue faced by some physical therapists is that there are currently few RCTs conducted in their area of practice (eg, pediatrics, occupational health), or they treat people with relatively rare conditions (eg, cerebellar cerebellar /cer·e·bel·lar/ (ser?e-bel´ar) pertaining to the cerebellum.
Cerebellar
Involving the part of the brain (cerebellum), which controls walking, balance, and coordination.
 degeneration degeneration /de·gen·er·a·tion/ (de-jen?er-a´shun) deterioration; change from a higher to a lower form, especially change of tissue to a lower or less functionally active form. ) for which it is probably not feasible to conduct trials. This means that the physical therapist ,nay nay  
adv.
1. No: All but four Democrats voted nay.

2. And moreover: He was ill-favored, nay, hideous.

n.
1. A denial or refusal.
 have to rely on lower levels of evidence or generalize generalize /gen·er·al·ize/ (-iz)
1. to spread throughout the body, as when local disease becomes systemic.

2. to form a general principle; to reason inductively.
 from trials using subjects with a different diagnosis who may have some impairments in common with target patients. For example, there are no trials that have evaluated the effect of strength training for people with chronic whiplash-associated disorder, but a recent trial (49) in women with chronic nonspecific nonspecific /non·spe·cif·ic/ (non?spi-sif´ik)
1. not due to any single known cause.

2. not directed against a particular agent, but rather having a general effect.


nonspecific

1.
 neck pain showed clinically worthwhile effects of strength training on pain and disability. It seems reasonable to assume that there may be similar effects in people with chronic whiplash-associated disorder. Thus, these data could be used to estimate the size of effect of a similar intervention in this patient group. The process of estimation may be assisted by the routine provision of detailed information by authors (ie, explicitly reporting the source of patients in a trial [eg, volunteers, referral]), inclusion and exclusion criteria exclusion criteria AIDS Donor exclusion criteria, see there , and characteristics of the study population.

Drawing Conclusions

The terms "effective" and "ineffective" are commonly used to categorize cat·e·go·rize  
tr.v. cat·e·go·rized, cat·e·go·riz·ing, cat·e·go·riz·es
To put into a category or categories; classify.



cat
 physical therapy interventions, typically based on statistical hypothesis testing One may be faced with the problem of making a definite decision with respect to an uncertain hypothesis which is known only through its observable consequences. A statistical hypothesis test, or more briefly, hypothesis test . Although it is very attractive to classify effects of intervention as effective or ineffective, more useful information can be gleaned from knowing the actual size of the effect. (29, 30) For example, although it is useful to know that gait training The introduction to this article provides insufficient context for those unfamiliar with the subject matter.
Please help [ improve the introduction] to meet Wikipedia's layout standards. You can discuss the issue on the talk page.
 and treadmill training with body weight support for people with stroke is "effective," it is more useful to know that, on average, this therapy increases walking speed by 0.25 [m * s.sup.-1] compared with gait training alone (50) Classifying the outcomes of trials as effective or ineffective also may lead to apparent contradictions between the results of different studies of similar interventions where the studies have different statistical power.

We suggested in the previous section that to best apply the results of RCTs and systematic reviews to individual patient care, physical therapists need to adjust the average effect sizes found in studies to estimate the likely effect on an individual. However, this process is quite difficult and relies on the physical therapist's clinical experience with that patient group as well as knowledge of prognostic factors prognostic factor Medtalk Any factor–eg, Pt age, family Hx, lifestyle, stage of presentation, that is weighed in determining a prognosis. See Prognosis. . It is likely that with practice a physical therapist's ability to do this would improve, but this is yet to be evaluated by research studies.

When interpreting the results of research studies, it is important to distinguish between situations where there is "evidence of no effect" (ie, a number of well-designed, adequately powered studies showed that a particular intervention did not have a clinically important effect in a particular setting) and situations where there is insufficient evidence insufficient evidence n. a finding (decision) by a trial judge or an appeals court that the prosecution in a criminal case or a plaintiff in a lawsuit has not proved the case because the attorney did not present enough convincing evidence.  to judge intervention effectiveness (ie, there have not been enough well-designed, adequately powered studies to assess the effect of a particular intervention in a particular setting). In the first situation, the confidence interval confidence interval,
n a statistical device used to determine the range within which an acceptable datum would fall. Confidence intervals are usually expressed in percentages, typically 95% or 99%.
 is narrow and includes the point of nonsignificance, so we can be fairly confident that the intervention is ineffective. In the second situation, we do not know whether the intervention is effective, ineffective, or harmful, because the wide Confidence interval includes all of these possibilities. Anecdotally, these 2 concepts seem to be commonly contused con·tuse  
tr.v. con·tused, con·tus·ing, con·tus·es
To injure without breaking the skin; bruise.



[Middle English contusen, from Latin contundere
 by clinicians and, particularly, by health care policy makers. The distinction between the 2 situations is much clearer in studies in which confidence intervals about estimates of treatment effect size are reported. (29, 30, 51)

Consumer Input

Evidence-based physical therapy has the potential to empower health care consumers to have real input into decision making about their care. If this is to happen, consumers will need to be able to access results of research, and they will need to be assisted to interpret this research. Ideally, both access and assistance would be provided by someone other than the treating health care professional. Informed decision making by health care consumers is becoming increasingly possible via mechanisms such as the Informed Health Online (http://www.inibrmedhealthonline.org/item. aspx). This initiative of the Cochrane Collaboration The Cochrane Collaboration was developed in response to Archie Cochrane's call for up-to-date, systematic reviews of all relevant randomized controlled trials of health care.  provides lay summaries of Cochrane systematic reviews, many of which are of relevance to consumers of physical therapists' services (92 summaries identified using the terms "physiotherapy" and "exercise" on November 19, 2003). The initiative by some countries to provide residents with universal access to the Cochrane Library (http://www. update-software.com/cochrane/provisions.htm) greatly enhances the potential for increased consumer knowledge. Health departments in several countries also have set up Web sites aimed at providing information to consumers (eg, http://www.nhsdirect.nhs.uk in the United Kingdom, http://www.healthinsite.gov.au in Australia). However, more progress needs to be made in this area before a substantial proportion of patients are sufficiently informed with high-quality evidence to have informed input into decision making. Patients also should have the opportunity to assist in the development of research questions and finding priorities.

Conclusion

There are problems with access to evidence and interpreting whatever evidence is retrieved. Many of these problems are not unique to physical therapy. Some recent initiatives have improved access to research by physical therapists. Nevertheless, many barriers to access and interpretation of evidence remain. We have suggested some strategies that could be adopted by researchers, editors, reviewers, managers, and clinicians to overcome these barriers. These strategies include facilitating the publication of all research, use of an optimum format for reporting research, maximizing the efficient use of electronic databases, improving physical therapists' skills in critical appraisal of published research, and fostering consumer access to evidence.

In our view, the current problems with accessing and interpreting evidence are not a sufficient argument to reject evidence-based practice. Alternate models of practice (eg, those that emphasize clinical experience alone or the opinions of experts) also face problems, and, in our view, these problems are far more serious. More importantly, we believe that the current problems with accessing and interpreting evidence can be solved by the approaches we describe in this article.

Appendix 1.

Chartered Society of Physiotherapy (CSP) Core Collection of Journals in Physical Therapy (a)

Advances in Physiotherapy, quarterly, Taylor & Francis, ISSN ISSN
abbr.
International Standard Serial Number
 1403 8196

American Journal of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation rehabilitation: see physical therapy. , monthly, Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, ISSN 0894-9115

Archives of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, monthly, WB Saunders Co, ISSN 0003-9993

Australian Journal of Physiotherapy, quarterly, Australian Physiotherapy Association, ISSN 0004-9514

British Journal of Therapy & Rehabilitation, monthly, Mark Allen Mark Allen is the name of:
  • Mark Allen (triathlete)
  • Mark "Bull" Allen (All Black), rugby football representative
  • Mark Allen (software developer)
  • Mark Allen (snooker player)
  • Mark Allen (Mayor, Peoria Heights Illinois)
, ISSN 1654-8581

Clinical Biomechanics The study of the anatomical principles of movement. Biomechanical applications on the computer employ stick modeling to analyze the movement of athletes as well as racing horses.
Biomechanics 
, 10 issues per year, Elsevier, ISSN 0268-0033

Clinical Rehabilitation, 8 times per year, Arnold, ISSN 0269-2155

Journal of Bodywork bodywork /body·work/ (-wurk?) a general term for therapeutic methods that center on the body for the promotion of physical health and emotional and spiritual well-being, including massage, various systems of touch and manipulation,  & Movement Therapies, quarterly, Elsevier Science, ISSN 1360-8592

Journal of Manual & Manipulative ma·nip·u·la·tive  
adj.
Serving, tending, or having the power to manipulate.

n.
Any of various objects designed to be moved or arranged by hand as a means of developing motor skills or understanding abstractions, especially in
 Therapy, quarterly, JMMT JMMT Journal of Manual and Manipulative Therapy
JMMT Joint Military Mail Terminal


Journal of Orthopaedic & Sports Physical Therapy, monthly, Orthopaedic and Sports Physical Therapy Sections of the American Physical Therapy Association The American Physical Therapy Association (APTA) is a national professional organization representing more than 66,000 members. Its goal is to foster advancements in physical therapy practice, research, and education. , ISSN 0190-6011

Journal of Manipulative & Physiological Therapeutics, 9 times per year, Mosby, ISSN 0161-4754

Manual Therapy, quarterly, Harcourt, ISSN 1356-689X

Pediatric pediatric /pe·di·at·ric/ (pe?de-at´rik) pertaining to the health of children.

pe·di·at·ric
adj.
Of or relating to pediatrics.
 Physical Therapy, quarterly, Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, ISSN 8098-5669

Physical & Occupational Therapy in Geriatrics geriatrics (jĕrēă`trĭks), the branch of medicine concerned with conditions and diseases of the aged. Many disabilities in old age are caused by or related to the deterioration of the circulatory system (see arteriosclerosis), e.g. , quarterly, Haworth Press, ISSN 0270-3181

Physical & Occupational Therapy in Pediatrics, quarterly, Haworth Press, ISSN 0194-2638

Physical Therapy, monthly, American Physical Therapy Association, ISSN 0031-9023

Physical Therapy Case Reports, bimonthly bi·month·ly  
adj.
1. Happening every two months.

2. Happening twice a month; semimonthly.

adv.
1. Once every two months.

2. Twice a month; semimonthly.

n. pl.
, Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, ISSN 1094-0367

Physical Therapy Reviews, quarterly, Maney Publishing Maney Publishing publishes over 50 international peer-reviewed journals. It was founded in 1900. External links
Maney Publishing
, ISSN 10830367

Physical Therapy in Sports, quarterly, Harcourt, ISSN 1466-853X

Physiotherapy, monthly, Chartered Society of Physiotherapy, ISSN 0031-9406

Physiotherapy Research International, quarterly, Turpin, ISSN 1358-2267

Physiotherapy Theory & Practice, quarterly, Taylor & Francis, ISSN 0959-3985

(a) Available at: http://www.csp.org.uk/libraryandinformation/library/ physiotherapycollections/corelist.cfm. Accessed October 11, 2003.

Appendix 2.

World Confederation for Physical Therapy (WCPT) List of Journals of Greatest Relevance to Physical Therapy and Evidence-Based Practice (a)

Advances in Physiotherapy

Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation physical medicine and rehabilitation
 or physiatry or physical therapy or rehabilitation medicine

Medical specialty treating chronic disabilities through physical means to help patients return to a comfortable, productive life despite a medical


Australian Journal of Physiotherapy

Hang Kong Physiotherapy Journal

Journal of Physical Therapy Science (English version)

Journal of Physical Therapy Science (Japanese version)

Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine rehabilitation medicine Physiatry, physiotherapy A field of therapeutics that bridges the gap between conventional and nonconventional medicine; rehabilitation physicians may adminsiter or prescribe mechanical–eg, massage, manipulation, exercise, movement,  (previously the Scandinavian Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine)

Journal of Rehabilitation Research and Development The Journal of Rehabilitation Research and Development (JRRD), formerly known as the Bulletin of Prosthetics Research, is an international peer-reviewed journal and resource for researchers and clinicians, as well as individuals with disabilities.

Journal of Sports Science Sports science is a discipline that studies the application of scientific principles and techniques with the aim of improving sporting performance. Human movement is a related scientific discipline that studies human movement in all contexts including that of sport.  and Medicine

Journal of the Japanese Physical Therapy Association (English version)

Journal of the Japanese Physical Therapy Association (Japanese version)

Manual Therapy

Physical Therapy

Physiotherapy

Physiotherapy Research International

Physiotherapy Singapore

Physiotherapy Theory and Practice

Revista Mexicana de Medicina Fisica y Rehabilitacion (Spanish)

Spine

Tidsskriftet Fysioterapeuten (Norwegian)

Clinical Evidence

Online access is provided free or at greatly reduced rates to developing countries (commenced June 2002). This is part of an initiative spearheaded by the World Health Organization (WHO) and the British Medical Journal The British Medical Journal, or BMJ, is one of the most popular and widely-read peer-reviewed general medical journals in the world.[2] It is published by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd (owned by the British Medical Association), whose other  (BMJ BMJ n abbr (= British Medical Journal) → vom BMA herausgegebene Zeitschrift ). Six of the world's leading medical publishers have joined forces in a unique venture to enable more than 100 of the poorest countries in the world to access vital scientific information in an affordable way through the Internet. The breakthrough was announced in a press release from the WHO in 2001. Further coverage and comment can be seen in BMJ.

Effective Health Care Bulletins

From the National Health Service Centre for Reviews and Dissemination The Centre for Reviews and Dissemination (CRD) is a health services research centre based at the University of York, England. The CRD was established in January 1994, and aims to provide research-based information for evidence-based medicine. , York, United Kingdom. Also available in Italian.

Examples of topics relevant to physical therapy: Acupuncture acupuncture (ăk`ypŭng'chər), technique of traditional Chinese medicine, in which a number of very fine metal needles are inserted into the skin at specially designated points.  2001, Acute and chronic low back pain 2000

Bandolier

Evidence-Based Medicine

Evidence Based Mental Health

Evidence-Based Healthcare

ACP Journal Club (American College of Physicians The American College of Physicians (ACP) is a national organization of doctors of internal medicine (internists), physicians who specialize in the prevention, detection and treatment of illnesses in adults. )

(a) Available at: http://www.wcpt.org/programmes/ebp/journals.html. Accessed October 11, 2003.
Table 1.
Percentage of Key Physical Therapy Journals
Indexed by Electronic Databases (a)

                                          Bohannon, (23)
Source           Wakiji, (24) 1997        1999

Definition of    "Zone 1" journals        "Core" journals
  key journals

n                 14                      47
MEDLINE          100%                     96%
EMBASE           100%                     98%
CINAHL            86% (d)                 89% (e)
PEDro            100%                     91% (f)

                 Maher et al, (25)        CSP Web
Source           2001                     Site (b)

Definition of    Journals on PEDro        "Core" journal
  key journals     with highest quality     collection
                   scores 1990-2001

n                 45                       22
MEDLINE           95%                      59%
EMBASE           100%                      82%
CINAHL            91%                     100%
PEDro            100%                      77% (f)

Source           WCPT Web Site (c)

Definition of    Journals with greatest
  key journals     relevance to physical
                   therapy and evidence-
                   based practice

n                 25
MEDLINE           48%
EMBASE            52%
CINAHL            72%
PEDro             40% (g)

(a) Databases checked October 11, 2003. CINAHL=Cumulative Index
to Nursing and Allied Health.

(b) See Appendix 1 for Chartered Society of Physiotherapy (CSP) core
collection of journals in physical therapy (http://www.csp.org.uk/
libraryandinformation/library/physiotherapycollections/corelist.cfm).
Accessed October 11, 2003.

(c) See Appendix 2 for World Confederation tut Physical Therapy
(WCPT) list of journals of greatest relevance to physical therapy
and evidence-based practice (http://www.wcpt.org/programmes/ebp/
journals.html). Accessed October 11, 2003.

(d) Up from 57% in 1997.

(e) Up front 72% in 1999.

(f) The remainder of these journals are regularly searched for
articles appropriate for the physiotherapy Evidence Database
(PEDro) but to date have not had any records indexed.

(g) A further 36% of these journals are regularly searched
for articles appropriate for PEDro but to date have not had
any records indexed.

Table 2.
Key Physical Therapy Journals Available
Electronically as Full Text Without Subscription (a)

                                                       Full-Text
                                                       Availability
                                                       Without
Journal                                                Subscription

Journal of Physical Therapy Science                    1995--current
  jpts.jstage.jst.go.jp/en or /ja                      Vol 7 No. 1
Journal of Rehabilitation Research and Development     1998--current
  www.vard.org/jour/jourindx.htm                       Vol 35 No. 3
Journal of the Japanese Physical Therapy Association   1998--current
  jjpta.jstage.jst.go.jp/cgi-bin/rs.cgi?FID=           Vol 1 No. 1
  9000000&LANGUAGE=en or =ja
Journal of Sports Science and Medicine                 2002--current
  jssm.uludag.edu.tr                                   Vol 1 No. 1
Revista Mexicana de Medicina Fisica y Rehabilitacion   2000--current
  (Spanish)                                            Vol 12 No. 1
  www.medigraphic.com/espanol/e-htms/e-fisica/em-mf
Ugeskrift for Laeger                                   1999--current
  www.dadlnet.dk/ufl/seneste.htm                       No. 1

(a) Key physical therapy journals compiled from the Chartered Society
of Physiotherapy's core collection of journals in physical therapy
(available at: http://www.csp.org.uk/libararyandinformation/library/
pinsiotherapycollections/corelist.cfm, accessed April 13, 2003); the
World Confederation for Physical Therapy's list of journals of
greatest relevance to physical therapy and evidence-based practice
(available at: http://www.wcpt.org/programmes/ebp/journals.html,
accessed April 13, 2003); and journals with at least 25 records in
the Physiotherapy Evidence Database (PEDro) (available at: http://
www.pedro.fhs.usyd.edu.au, accessed April 13, 2003).


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  • Lewi Tonks, American quantum physicist especially known for the discovery of the Tonks-Girardeau gas
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adj.
1. Divided or dividing into two parts or classifications.

2. Characterized by dichotomy.



di·chot
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CG Maher, PT, Ph D, is Associate Professor, School of Physiotherapy School of Physiotherapy is located in Lahore, Punjab, Pakistan. It is located in Mayo Hospital and is affiliated with King Edward Medical College. , Faculty of Health Sciences, The University of Sydney The University of Sydney, established in Sydney in 1850, is the oldest university in Australia. It is a member of Australia's "Group of Eight" Australian universities that are highly ranked in terms of their research performance. , PO Box 170, Lidcombe, New South Wales Lidcombe is a suburb in western Sydney, in the state of New South Wales Australia. Lidcombe is located 17 kilometres west of the Sydney central business district, in the local government area of Auburn Council. Lidcombe is colloquially known as ‘Liddy’.  1825, Australia (C.Maher@lhs.usyd.edu.au). Address all correspondence to Dr Maher.

C Sherrington, PT, PhD, is Research Fellow, Prince of Wales Prince of Wales

switches places with his double, poor boy Tom Canty. [Am. Lit.: The Prince and the Pauper]

See : Doubles
 Medical Research Institute, University of New South Wales The University of New South Wales, also known as UNSW or colloquially as New South, is a university situated in Kensington, a suburb in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. , Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

M Elkins, PT, M HSc, is Research Physiotherapist physiotherapist /phys·io·ther·a·pist/ (-ther´ah-pist) physical therapist.

physiotherapist

physical therapist.
, Department of Respiratory Medicine, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital RPA Hospital is sometimes confused with The Alfred Hospital in Melbourne, Victoria. The short form "PA Hospital" also refers to Princess Alexandra Hospital in Brisbane, Queensland. , Camperdown, New South Wales Camperdown is an inner-city suburb of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales, Australia. Camperdown is located 4 kilometres south-west of the Sydney central business district and is part of the Inner West region. , Australia.

RD Herbert, PT, PhD, is Senior Lecturer senior lecturer
n. Chiefly British
A university teacher, especially one ranking next below a reader.
, School of Physiotherapy, The University of Sydney.

AM Moseley, PT, PhD, is Lecturer, Rehabilitation Studies Unit, Faculty of Medicine, The University of Sydney.

The authors are Directors of the Centre for Evidence-Based Physiotherapy.

All authors provided concept/idea/research design, writing, fund procurement, and consultation (including review of manuscript before submission). Dr Maher provided data collection and analysis, project management, facilities/equipment, and institutional liaisons.

This work was partially funded by the Centre for Evidence-Based Physiotberapy's financial supporters: Motor Accidents Authority of New South Wales, Australia; Physiotherapists Registration Board of New South Wales, Australia; NRMA NRMA National Roads & Motorists' Association (Australia)
NRMA National Reloading Manufacturers Association
NRMA Natural Resource Management Area
NRMA National Resources Mobilization Act (Canada) 
 Insurance, Australia; and New South Wales Department of Health The New South Wales Department of Health is an agency of the Government of New South Wales with responsibility for the provision of healthcare, particularly through public hospitals.

The Minister for Health is Reba Meagher.
, Australia.
COPYRIGHT 2004 American Physical Therapy Association, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Perspective
Author:Moseley, Anne M.
Publication:Physical Therapy
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jul 1, 2004
Words:7477
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