Clinical Research Case Studies of Successes and Failures /
This book provides insights into how to be a productive clinical researcher via real-life case examples of successful clinical research -- and also clinical research gone awry. Through these examples of success and failure, the book develops a blueprint for building a career in clinical research. Fu...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Autor Corporativo: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
New York, NY :
Springer New York : Imprint: Springer,
2015.
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Edición: | 1st ed. 2015. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto Completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Dedication
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Table of Contents
- Basic Premise
- Case 1. A "good" question
- Case 2. A "bad" question
- Case 3. Why were 116 patients excluded?
- Case 4. Sometimes a good question evolves from a bad one
- Case 5. What went wrong?
- Case 6. Check your facts
- Case 7. All is not lost
- Case 8. An important lesson
- Case 9. A lucky escape
- Case 10. A letter or a full paper
- Case 11. This could be serious. Be prepared
- Case 12. Not correct procedure
- Case 13. A lesson well learned
- Case 14. Taking out a patent. Should you or should you not?
- Case 15. Taking out a patent. Watch out
- Case 16. A laboratory lesson
- Case 17. Before you start any research
- Case 18. An offer of employment. What to look for
- Case 19. What should you do?
- Case 20. Who to trust
- Case 21. Elementary
- Case 22. Never give up
- Case 23. How long should a study go on?
- Case 24. What to do
- Case 25. To what journal should you send your work?
- Case 26. A drug sponsored trial
- Case 27. The difference between research and quality assurance/improvement
- Case 28. Stopping a clinical study
- Case 29. Controversy
- Case 30. The P Value
- Case 31. How many authors?
- Case 32. If you injure your patient
- Case 33. Multicenter trials
- Case 34. Unprofessional behavior
- Case 35. Tips on how to get the Institutional Review Board (IRB) submission completed and passed
- Case 36. How to perform and report the result of a survey
- Case 37. Validity of the cricoid pressure (Sellick's maneuver
- Case 38. Another unprofessional behavior
- Case 39. A data set
- Case 40. Taking over an ongoing clinical trial
- Case 41. Should you do a pilot study in this proposed trial?
- Case 42. An inconclusive result (negative result). What to do
- Case 43. Retrospective studies. What to watch out for
- Case 44. Plagiarism
- Case 45. Pediatric research
- Case 46. Your paper is rejected. What to do
- Case 47. You disagree with a conclusion of a published article
- Case 48. Is this a good study?
- Case 49. Meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials
- Case 50. Is the title of a paper or grant important?
- Case 51. Sampling and subjects
- Case 52. What not to do if you are a mentor
- Case 53. Be aware
- Case 54. A statistical impasse
- Case 55. A bad outcome
- Case 56. A case report
- Case 57. Are case reports becoming extinct
- Case 58. A clinical pharmacology study
- Case 59. Watch out
- Case 60. A new equipment
- Case 61. Those that ignore the past
- Case 62. What are the safety data for this formulation?
- Case 63. This is a test to see what you have learned
- Review of the clinical research process. From the beginning to the end
- The future of clinical research
- Summary of Pearls.