Evidence-Based Practice (EBP) combines:
Best available research evidence
Patient values and characteristics
Clinical expertise
Evidence: Data from clinical research performed on patients
Theory: Data from basic science research or observation
Systematic Review of Randomized Trials (Highest quality)
Single Randomized Trial
Systematic Review of Observational Studies
Single Observational Study
Physiologic Studies
Unsystematic Clinical Observations
Randomized Clinical Trials (RCTs)
Combines data from multiple studies for precision
Advantage: Provides consensus and improved reliability
Disadvantage: Requires high-quality individual studies
Systematic Reviews
Ensures minimal bias and clear conclusions
Advantage: Strong evidence for cause-and-effect
Disadvantage: May not account for all patient variability
Observational Studies
Tracks outcomes over time without intervention
Advantage: Cost-effective; identifies rare occurrences
Disadvantage: Prone to confounding variables
Physiologic Studies
Examines biological mechanisms
Advantage: Provides insights on bodily processes
Disadvantage: May lack clinical relevance
Unsystematic Clinical Observations
Involves case studies or anecdotal evidence
Advantage: Good starting point for hypotheses
Disadvantage: Limited scope and reliability
Key questions to evaluate research:
Is the study valid?
Are the results important? (Significance, magnitude)
Are the results applicable to my patient?
PICO is a tool for developing clinical questions:
P = Patient/Problem/Population
I = Intervention (Treatment, test, etc.)
C = Comparison (Alternative treatment or standard)
O = Outcome (Desired result or improvement)
Example Question: "In Parkinson’s patients (P), does trunk rotation (I) improve rigidity (O) better than general aerobic training (C)?"
Search Terms: Combine synonyms with "AND" or "OR"
Databases:
PubMed/Medline
CINAHL (Nursing and Allied Health)
Embase (Drug and device monitoring)
Cochrane Library (Systematic reviews)
PEDro (Physiotherapy evidence)
OTseeker (Occupational therapy research)
Formulate focused questions using PICO
Use Boolean operators (AND, OR) to refine searches
Utilize MeSH terms for precise searching
Choose high-quality evidence such as Systematic Reviews and RCTs
Evidence is never enough – Patient preferences and clinician judgment are vital.
Not all evidence is equal – Higher levels of evidence provide stronger conclusions.