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Evidence-Based Medicine 2008;13:33; doi:10.1136/ebm.13.2.33
Copyright © 2008 by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.

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PURPOSE AND PROCEDURE

Purpose and procedure

The purpose of Evidence-Based Medicine is to alert clinicians to important advances in internal medicine, general and family practice, surgery, psychiatry, paediatrics, and obstetrics and gynaecology by selecting from the biomedical literature those original and review articles whose results are most likely to be both true and useful. These articles are summarised in value-added abstracts and commented on by clinical experts. The author of the original article is given an opportunity to review the abstract and commentary before publication.

The procedures we follow to achieve this purpose are


    CRITERIA FOR REVIEW AND SELECTION FOR ABSTRACTING
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 CRITERIA FOR REVIEW AND...
 
General
All English-language original and review articles in an issue of a candidate journal are considered for abstracting if they concern topics important to the clinical practice of internal medicine, general and family practice, surgery, psychiatry, paediatrics, or obstetrics and gynaecology. Access to foreign-language journals is provided through the systematic reviews we abstract, especially those in the Cochrane Library, which summarises articles from over 800 journals in several languages.

Prevention or treatment; quality improvement

Diagnosis

Prognosis

Causation

Economics of healthcare programmes or interventions

Clinical prediction guides

Differential diagnosis

Systematic reviews

Evidence-Based Medicine has a related journal, ACP Journal Club. It is generated using procedures identical to those used for Evidence-Based Medicine and is published by the American College of Physicians. Approximately one third of the abstracts in ACP Journal Club are published in Evidence-Based Medicine, and the abstracts not published are listed, by their declarative titles, in the section titled Additional Articles Abstracted in ACP Journal Club.





This Article
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Right arrow Alert me when this article is cited
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Copyright © 2008 by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.