Clinical Prediction Rules: Difference between revisions

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The intent of CPRs is to assist clinicians in making a diagnosis, establishing a prognosis, or implementing an intervention<ref>Childs JD, Cleland JA. Development and application of clinical prediction rules to improve decision making in physical therapist practice. Phys Ther. 2006;86:122–131.</ref>. It has been suggested that well-constructed CPRs can improve clinical decision making and practice, there is a lack of consensus as to what constitutes a methodologically sound&nbsp;CPR.<ref>Jason M Beneciuk, Mark D Bishop, Steven Z George. Clinical Prediction Rules for Physical Therapy Interventions: A Systematic Review. Phys Ther. 2009 February; 89(2): 114–124.</ref><br>
The intent of CPRs is to assist clinicians in making a diagnosis, establishing a prognosis, or implementing an intervention<ref>Childs JD, Cleland JA. Development and application of clinical prediction rules to improve decision making in physical therapist practice. Phys Ther. 2006;86:122–131.</ref>. It has been suggested that well-constructed CPRs can improve clinical decision making and practice, there is a lack of consensus as to what constitutes a methodologically sound&nbsp;CPR.<ref>Jason M Beneciuk, Mark D Bishop, Steven Z George. Clinical Prediction Rules for Physical Therapy Interventions: A Systematic Review. Phys Ther. 2009 February; 89(2): 114–124.</ref><br>


== What are clinical prediction rules? ==
== What are clinical prediction rules? ==


== Establishing a clinical prediction rule  ==
== Establishing a clinical prediction rule  ==

Revision as of 09:36, 3 October 2013

Introduction
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The intent of CPRs is to assist clinicians in making a diagnosis, establishing a prognosis, or implementing an intervention[1]. It has been suggested that well-constructed CPRs can improve clinical decision making and practice, there is a lack of consensus as to what constitutes a methodologically sound CPR.[2]

What are clinical prediction rules?[edit | edit source]

Establishing a clinical prediction rule[edit | edit source]

The establishment of a clinical prediction rule in clinical practice requires four distinct phases:

  1. Development - Identification of predictors from an observational study
  2. Validation - testing of the clinical prediction rule in a seperate population to see if it remains reliable
  3. Impact analysis - measurement of the usefulness of the rule in the clinical setting in terms of cost-benefit, patient satisfaction, time/resource allocation, etc

CPRs
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Diagnosis[edit | edit source]

Intervention[edit | edit source]

Resources[edit | edit source]

http://orthopedicmanualpt.com/clinical-decision-making/clinical-prediction-rules/

References[edit | edit source]

  1. Childs JD, Cleland JA. Development and application of clinical prediction rules to improve decision making in physical therapist practice. Phys Ther. 2006;86:122–131.
  2. Jason M Beneciuk, Mark D Bishop, Steven Z George. Clinical Prediction Rules for Physical Therapy Interventions: A Systematic Review. Phys Ther. 2009 February; 89(2): 114–124.