nr |
titel |
auteur |
tijdschrift |
jaar |
jaarg. |
afl. |
pagina('s) |
type |
1 |
A guide for health professionals to interpret and use recommendations in guidelines developed with the GRADE approach
|
Neumann, Ignacio |
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. 45-55 11 p. |
artikel |
2 |
A prognostic model based on readily available clinical data enriched a pre-emptive pharmacogenetic testing program
|
Schildcrout, Jonathan S. |
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. 107-115 9 p. |
artikel |
3 |
A reduced factor structure for the PROQOL–HIV questionnaire provided reliable indicators of health-related quality of life
|
Lalanne, Christophe |
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. 116-125 10 p. |
artikel |
4 |
Collecting and validating experiential expertise is doable but poses methodological challenges
|
Burda, Marika H.F. |
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. 10-15 6 p. |
artikel |
5 |
Data on the distribution of cancer incidence and death across age and sex groups visualized using multilevel spie charts
|
Feitelson, Dror G. |
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. 90-97 8 p. |
artikel |
6 |
Deficiencies in reporting of statistical methodology in recent randomized trials of nonpharmacologic pain treatments: ACTTION systematic review
|
Dworkin, Jordan D. |
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. 56-65 10 p. |
artikel |
7 |
Different methods to analyze stepped wedge trial designs revealed different aspects of intervention effects
|
Twisk, J.W.R. |
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. 75-83 9 p. |
artikel |
8 |
Early studies reported extreme findings with large variability: a meta-epidemiologic study in the field of endocrinology
|
Wang, Zhen |
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. 27-32 6 p. |
artikel |
9 |
Editorial Board
|
|
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. IFC- 1 p. |
artikel |
10 |
How to communicate effect sizes for continuous outcomes: a review of existing options and introducing a new metric
|
Valentine, Jeffrey C. |
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. 84-89 6 p. |
artikel |
11 |
Modified intention-to-treat analysis did not bias trial results
|
Dossing, Anna |
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. 66-74 9 p. |
artikel |
12 |
Old habits die hard—a reply to Adam La Caze
|
Walach, Harald |
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. 7-9 3 p. |
artikel |
13 |
Outcomes mapping study for childhood vaccination communication: too few concepts were measured in too many ways
|
Kaufman, Jessica |
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. 33-44 12 p. |
artikel |
14 |
Risk of bias assessment should not go beyond reporting assessment
|
Faggion Jr., Clovis Mariano |
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. 126-127 2 p. |
artikel |
15 |
Systematic reviews experience major limitations in reporting absolute effects
|
Alonso-Coello, Pablo |
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. 16-26 11 p. |
artikel |
16 |
Table of Contents
|
|
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. A3-A5 nvt p. |
artikel |
17 |
The hierarchy of evidence and quantum theory
|
La Caze, Adam |
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. 4-6 3 p. |
artikel |
18 |
The way in which effects are analyzed and communicated can make a difference for decision making
|
Knottnerus, J. André |
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. 1-3 3 p. |
artikel |
19 |
World Health Organization strong recommendations based on low-quality evidence (study quality) are frequent and often inconsistent with GRADE guidance
|
Alexander, Paul E. |
|
2016 |
72 |
C |
p. 98-106 9 p. |
artikel |