AbstractArticle
Family physicians' use of medical abstracts to guide decision making: style or substance?
H C Barry, M H Ebell, A F Shaughnessy, D C Slawson and F Nietzke
The Journal of the American Board of Family
Practice November 2001, 14 (6) 437-442;
H C Barry
M H Ebell
A F Shaughnessy
D C Slawson
In this issue
The Journal of the American Board of Family
Practice
Vol. 14, Issue 6
1 Nov 2001
Family physicians' use of medical abstracts to guide decision making: style or substance?
H C Barry, M H Ebell, A F Shaughnessy, D C Slawson, F Nietzke
The Journal of the American Board of Family
Practice Nov 2001, 14 (6) 437-442;
Jump to section
Related Articles
- No related articles found.
Cited By...
- Research Letter: Characterizing spin in psychiatric clinical research literature using large language models
- Reporting quality of abstracts from randomised controlled trials published in leading critical care nursing journals: a methodological quality review
- Effects of inulin-type fructans supplementation on cardiovascular disease risk factors: a protocol for a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials
- Influence of the statistical significance of results and spin on readers interpretation of the results in an abstract for a hypothetical clinical trial: a randomised trial
- Assessment of reporting quality in randomised controlled clinical trial abstracts of dental implantology published from 2014 to 2016
- Quality of reporting in abstracts of RCTs published in emergency medicine journals: a systematic survey of the literature suggests we can do better
- Evaluation of spin in abstracts of papers in psychiatry and psychology journals
- How are risk ratios reported in orthopaedic surgery journals? A descriptive study of formats used to report absolute risks
- Quality of reporting in abstracts of RCTs published in emergency medicine journals: a protocol for a systematic survey of the literature
- The quality of randomised controlled trials involving surgery from the hand to the elbow: a critical analysis of the literature
- Reporting quality of abstracts of trials published in top five pain journals: a protocol for a systematic survey
- How does evidence affect clinical decision-making?
- Author Financial Conflicts of Interest, Industry Funding, and Clinical Practice Guidelines for Anticancer Drugs
- Impact of Spin in the Abstracts of Articles Reporting Results of Randomized Controlled Trials in the Field of Cancer: The SPIIN Randomized Controlled Trial
- Comparing data accuracy between structured abstracts and full-text journal articles: implications in their use for informing clinical decisions
- A comparison of the accuracy of clinical decisions based on full-text articles and on journal abstracts alone: a study among residents in a tertiary care hospital