+research Skills IV
+research Skills IV
+research Skills IV
Consultation days are fixed weekly according to the timetable as well as online at
the specified address.
Course status Mandatory
ECTS credits 2 ECTS (1 credit - 25 hours) – 50 hrs.
Lecture 13 hours
Seminar 17 hours
Midterm exam 1 hours
Students’ workload
Final exam 2 hours
Contact hours - 33 hours
Individual work – 17 hours
Course Prerequisite Research Skills III (Biostatistics & Epidemiology), Health Informatics
Course Goal(s) The aim of the course is to teach students the principles of evidence-based medicine,
search systems and methods of searching for the valid information/data for effective
diagnosis and generation of evidence-based results, determination of the validity,
the meaning, and the applicability into practice of clinical research evidence
findings. Mastering EBM increases the confidence of physicians for decision making,
the quality of care, and their abilities to communicate clearly and efficiently with
colleagues, other health professionals, and with patients and their families.
Teaching-learning Lecture – a process in which both a lecturer and a student take part. The basic aim of
forms the lecture is to help students to comprehend the major notions of the subject taught
which implies interaction and creative and active perception of the material.
Attention is paid to basic concepts, definitions, designations, assumptions. The
lecture provides scientific and logically consistent cognition of basic logically
complete concepts. Facts, examples, schemes, drafts, experiments, and other visual
aids help explain the idea conveyed by the lecture. The lecture ensures the correct
analysis of the scientific dialectical process and is based on the ability of the students
to perceive and understand main scientific problems.
Seminar - under the supervision of a lecturer a group of students find and perceive
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additional information, prepare presentations, write essays, etc. This enables
students to deepen their knowledge of the themes studied at the lecture. At the
seminar reports are presented and discussed, conclusions are made. The lecturer
coordinates these processes.
Case study – Phrases a clinical question in a way that allows seeking and application
of evidence, find the best evidence for a given clinical question, critically appraise
the evidence for the major types of clinical questions, describe the limitations of
EBM.
Quiz – woring with searching systems and finding the evidence, appraise own
findings.
Learning Outcomes
General Competences
Knowledge and Understanding:
A student will be able to:
Deep and Systemic knowledge of the field and its critical analysis that covers some modern achievements of
the sphere, provides basis for the development of innovative, new, creative ideas.
Skills:
Obtain information from various sources, develop large-scale information and critically evaluate it, use
information collected during professional activities.
Search for new, creative ideas to solve complicated problems in multidisciplinary environment using modern
methods and approaches.
Provide with the critical analysis of complicated information, innovative synthesis of information, evaluation
and making decisions.
Presentation of own conclusions, arguments and research results both in academic and professional
environment observing the standards of academic ethics.
Show practical skills to work with colleagues, professional subordination / adaptation skills, ability to use new
technologies.
Able to adapt to a new environment - work with colleagues, show professional subordination / adaptation
skills.
Responsibility and Autonomy:
Show practical skills to work with colleagues, professional subordination / adaptation skills, ability to use new
technologies.
Able to adapt to a new environment - work with colleagues, show professional subordination / adaptation
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skills.
Manage multidisciplinary environment and adapt by using new strategic approaches.
Contribute to the development of professional knowledge and practice.
Field-Specific Knowledge
A student will:
Determine the principles of evidence-based medicine.
Identify the searching systems in medicine.
Determine the methods of searching and finding the valid information/sources/data.
Define EBM and describe the steps of the practice of EBM.
Enumerate the different purposes for searching the scientific biomedical literature.
Describe the difference between background and foreground questions.
Rephrase issues arising in patient care as correct clinical questions (PICO questions).
Conduct efficient searches of clinical evidence using the most appropriate terms and other tools (filters, operators,
and clinical queries) in databases available through the Internet, in accordance with the type of evidence of
interest.
Critically appraise the most common types of clinical research papers (interventions, harm, diagnostic tests, and
systematic reviews).
Apply the evidence to individual patients.
Field-Specific Competences
9. Use of knowledge, skills and principles based on evidence.
The use of evidence in decision making process
Determining the scientific/clinical problem, putting the relevant questions and finding the answer in relevant
literature through using the appropriate information sources.
The active use of evidences obtained through different literature sources and making the conclusions
regarding the health conditions of patient on the basis of assessing the quality of evidences.
Assessment system
In the case of FX assessment, the student can set for the make-up exam no less than 5 days after the
announcement of the examination results.
The minimum score for passing the midterm and final exams is 50% of the maximum score. The same
applies to the integrated course modules. In each module, the student must score 50% of the points assigned
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to each module. If a student does not score the required points in a course or one or two modules of an
integrated course, they are eligible to take the makeup exam.
The minimum score for admission to the final exam is 50% of the sum of ongoing and midterm assessments.
If a student fails to pass the make-up exam, he/she will study the course / the whole integrated course (all
modules) again.
In the case of failure of the make-up exam, a student shall study the course/integrated course again with all
its modules.
In the case of failure of the make-up exam, a student shall study the course/integrated course again with all
its modules.
ASSESSMENT FORMS, COMPONENTS, METHODS AND CRITERIA
Activity 40 points Midterm Exam 20 points Final Exam 40 points 100 points
Case study – 8
topics, each one is
assessed by 4 grade
points, total – 32
(8x4) grade points.
Quiz – work with searching systems and find the evidence:
Activity Each student is evaluated 4 times per semester, each task consists of 2 topics/open
questions; each relevant infornmation earns 1 grade point, total – 8 grade points.
Case Study – each student is evaluated 4 times per semester, each case consists of 2
tasks; each one is assessed with max. 8 grade points; total – 32 grade points.
Rubric:
Phrases a clinical question in a way that allows seeking and application of evidence –
1 grade point
Find the best evidence for a given clinical question – 1 grade point
Critically appraise the evidence for the major types of clinical questions – 1 grade
point
Describe the limitations of EBM – 1 grade point.
Midterm Exam – Written and oral examination
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Test includes 5 open questions (10 points) and 20 MCQs (10 points)
Each correctly pointed MCQ answer earns 0,5 point; total -10 points.
Rubric:
Midterm Exam Each correctly pointed answer earns 0,5 point.
Each incorrectly pointed answer earns 0 point.
Test includes 8 open questions (16 points) and 48 MCQs (24 points)
Each correctly pointed MCQ answer earns 0,5 point; total -24 points.
Rubric:
Each correctly pointed answer earns 0,5 point.
Each incorrectly pointed answer earns 0 point.
Final Exam
Rubric for open questions:
2 points - the knowledge of the topic is exhaustive, precisely determines functions of
structural entities and their interrelations
1 point – the knowledge of the topic is poor, unable to formulate properly the
functions of structural entities and their interrelations.
0 point - doesn’t know the topic, unable to formulate the functions of structural
entities and their interrelations.
Textbook and course materials
Literature Textbooks
1. Evidence-Based Medicine, S. E. Straus, P. Glasziou, et al., 2019, Elsevier,
2. Fundamentals of Evidence-Based Medicine, Kameshwar Prashad, Second Edition,
2013, Springer
Additional reading
3. Evidence-Based Clinical Reasoning in Medicine, Thomas Brown, Sonali Shah,
2013, People’s Medical Publishing House - USA
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4. User’s Guide to the Medical Literature: Essentials of Evidence-Based Clinical
Practice, Gordon Guuyatt, Drummond Rennie, Maureen O. Meade, Deborah J.
Cook, 2015, McGraw Hill Education.
Course content