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Routinely collected data as real-world evidence for physiotherapy practice

Evidence-based practice is the current undisputed predominant paradigm within medicine and allied health care, particularly in physiotherapy. Despite its potential benefits, over the years various points of criticism have been formulated one of which is the overreliance on randomized clinical trials...

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Published in:Physiotherapy theory and practice 2019-09, Vol.35 (9), p.805-809
Main Authors: van Trijffel, Emiel, A.B. Oostendorp, Rob, Elvers, J.W. Hans
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Language:English
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creator van Trijffel, Emiel
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description Evidence-based practice is the current undisputed predominant paradigm within medicine and allied health care, particularly in physiotherapy. Despite its potential benefits, over the years various points of criticism have been formulated one of which is the overreliance on randomized clinical trials as the highest level of evidence for treatment effectiveness. In the current era, where the availability of large amounts of clinical data gathered during the course of care delivery is rapidly increasing as well as our ability to access, process, link, and analyze these data in fairly efficient ways, alternative sources to supplement rather than replace evidence from RCTs look promising. In this Editorial, we discuss the opportunities and limitations of these routinely collected data in physiotherapy research and provide several examples from the literature. We conclude that the use of routinely collected data in physiotherapy research has the potential to increasingly contribute to real-world evidence, particularly in musculoskeletal primary care physiotherapy, provided that researchers are aware of methodological limitations and adhere to reporting standards.
doi_str_mv 10.1080/09593985.2019.1615678
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source Taylor and Francis:Jisc Collections:Taylor and Francis Read and Publish Agreement 2024-2025:Medical Collection (Reading list)
subjects Data Collection
Evidence-Based Practice
Humans
levels of evidence
Physical Therapy Specialty
physiotherapy
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
real-world evidence
Research Design
routinely collected data
title Routinely collected data as real-world evidence for physiotherapy practice
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