Journal Club: Frequent Fliers, Internal and External Validity, and the Problem With Making Continuous Variables Binary
Refers to article:
Comparisons of High Versus Low Emergency Department Utilizers in Sickle Cell Disease
, 17 October 2008
Imoigele P. Aisiku, Wally R. Smith, Donna K. McClish, James L. Levenson, Lynne T. Penberthy, Susan D. Roseff, Viktor E. Bovbjerg, John D. Roberts
Annals of Emergency Medicine
May 2009 (Vol. 53, Issue 5, Pages 587-593) Abstract |
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No abstract is available. To read the body of this article, please view the Full Text online.
aDepartment of Emergency Medicine, Keck School of Medicine/ University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA
Section editors: Tyler W. Barrett, MD; David L. Schriger, MD, MPH
Editor's Note: You are reading the ninth installment of Annals of Emergency Medicine Journal Club. This bimonthly feature seeks to improve the critical appraisal skills of emergency physicians and other interested readers through a guided critique of actual Annals of Emergency Medicine articles. Each Journal Club will pose questions that encourage readers—be they clinicians, academics, residents, or medical students—to critically appraise the literature.
During a 2- to 3-year cycle, we plan to ask questions that cover the main topics in research methodology and critical appraisal of the literature. To do this, we will select articles that use a variety of study designs and analytic techniques. These may or may not be the most clinically important articles in a specific issue, but they are articles that serve the mission of covering the clinical epidemiology curriculum. Journal Club entries are published in 2 phases. In the first phase, a list of questions about the article is published in the issue in which the article appears. Questions are rated “novice,” () “intermediate,” () and “advanced” () so that individuals planning a journal club can assign the right question to the right student. The answers to this journal club will be published in the October 2009 issue. US residency directors will have immediate access to the answers through the Council of Emergency Medicine Residency Directors Share Point Web site. International residency directors can gain access to the questions by going to http://www.emergencymedicine.ucla.edu/annalsjc/ and following the directions. Thus, if a program conducts its journal club within 5 months of the publication of the questions, no one will have access to the published answers except the residency director. The purpose of delaying the publication of the answers is to promote discussion and critical review of the literature by residents and medical students and discourage regurgitation of the published answers.
It is our hope that the Journal Club will broaden Annals of Emergency Medicine's appeal to residents and medical students. We are interested in receiving feedback about this feature. Please e-mail journalclub@acep.orgwith your comments.