Eldar M. Berkovits, Doron Netzer
Department of Family Medicine, B. Rapaport Faculty of Medicine, Technion, Israel (eldarb@netvision.net.il)
During the last decade, the production of
medical information has doubled every 2 years. It is predicted that
information will double at an even faster rate, i.e. every 1–3 months [1].
This dramatic rate of changing medical knowledge presents a challenge for
physicians to keep themselves up to date. Since accessibility to a medical
library as a source of information is limited, the Internet may be a
possible alternative. The Internet is a relatively cheap way to receive
updated information, whether written, audio or videotaped, all of which is
available from the comfort of home, 24h a day, at the cost of little more
than a local telephone call.
Physicians are usually eager for the latest medical information. The late
British epidemiologist, Archie Cochrane, developed a relatively new approach
using up-to-date medical information. His approach integrates individual
clinical expertise with the best available external clinical evidence from
systematic research. Through this method new information is located,
identified and its significance evaluated. If the new information has been
proven to be reliable and relevant, it is integrated into existing
information systems to be used by physicians all over the world. This
approach is called evidence-based medicine (EBM) [2, 3].
The vision of Cochrane was put into practice soon after his death in 1988,
through the Cochrane Collaboration, an international organisation that aims
to help physicians (clinicians and policy makers) to make informed health
care decisions by preparing, maintaining and promoting systematic reviews of
the effect of health care interventions. In other words, rather than medical
decisions being made on the basis of outdated information, a hunch or
intuition, this approach allows the physician to review what has been shown
to be effective and on that basis make an operative decision. EBM uses a
simple scale to assign a level to the evidence (Table I). The best evidence
is from systematic reviews which summarise randomised controlled trials (RCTs).
The lowest level of evidence is expert opinion and the ‘personal
communication’ source, also known as ‘someone once told me’.
Table I: Levels of evidence (based on AHCPR 1992).
|
Ia Evidence obtained from a
meta-analysis of RCTs |
The Cochrane Collaboration is a
non-profit-making organisation, limited by guarantee and registered in the
UK as a charity. Currently there are 15 Cochrane centres around the world
and more than 50 collaborative review groups preparing and maintaining
Cochrane systematic reviews. The database of the ‘Cochrane Library’
contains 1388 regularly updated systematic reviews, 300,000 RCTs, and
critical assessment abstracts of good systematic reviews published elsewhere
[4].
The OB/GYN discipline has contributed greatly to the establishment of the
Cochrane collaboration and library. In 1987, the year before his death,
Cochrane referred to a systematic review of RCTs of care during pregnancy
and childbirth as ‘a real milestone in the history of randomised trials
and in the evaluation of care’, suggesting that other specialities should
copy the methods used [5]. The Cochrane Collaboration logo (Figure 1)
illustrates this systematic review of data from seven RCTs.

Figure 1: The Cochrane Collaboration logo.
Each horizontal line represents the results of one trial (the shorter the
line, the more certain the result), and the diamond represents their
combined results. The vertical line indicates the position around which the
horizontal lines would cluster if no clear difference was found between the
two treatments compared in the trial. The position of the diamond to the
left of the vertical line indicates that the treatment studied is
beneficial.
The diagram shows the results of a systematic review of RCTs of a short,
inexpensive course of a corticosteroid given to women expected to give birth
prematurely. The first of these RCTs was reported in 1973. The diagram
summarises the evidence that was to be presented a decade later: it
indicates strongly that corticosteroids reduce the risk of babies dying from
the complications of immaturity. By 1991, seven more trials had been
reported and the picture in the logo had become even clearer. The treatment
reduces the odds of premature infants dying from the complications of
immaturity by 30–50%. Because no systematic review of these trials had
been published until 1989, most obstetricians had not realised that
corticosteroid treatment was so effective. As a result, tens of thousands of
premature infants have probably suffered and died unnecessarily (and cost
the health services more than was necessary). This is just one of many
examples of the human costs resulting from failure to perform systematic,
up-to-date reviews of RCTs of health care.
Is EBM really a new approach in the field of
medicine or is it a routine activity already regularly performed by
physicians?
The influx of new medical information well exceeds any physician’s ability
to keep fully up to date. Covell et al. [6], in their article:
‘Information needs in office practice: are they being met?’, published
in 1985, state that reliable information is needed in about two out of three
physician-patient meetings at primary care clinics. Yet most physicians
obtain the appropriate information in just 30% of those cases. The reasons
for this divergence given by the research participants were:
‘My textbooks are out of date by the time they are published.’
‘My journals are too disorganised and not useful for routine information retrieval.’'The influx of new medical information well exceeds any physician’s ability to keep fully up to date.'
How much time do we
spend reading medical information?
Medical students typically spend as much as 2 h per week, probably in part
because they do not have any choice, but most physicians and consultants
spend far less than this. Up to 75% of house officers have not read anything
about the problems presented by their patients in the previous week, and
they are being taught by consultants up to 40% of whom have not recently
read anything about the subject either [7].
Figure
2: Knowledge of current best care of hypertension: the slippery slope
[8].
The slippery slope shown in Figure 2
depicts the progressive decline in knowledge-based clinical competency after
the completion of formal training. Sackett et al. [8] demonstrated that when
our skills are measured by our knowledge of even the fundamentals of a basic
disorder, such as hypertension, there is a statistically and clinically
significant negative correlation between our knowledge of up-to-date care
and the years that have elapsed since our graduation from medical school.
There are two reasons for this: first, we read less; and second, the amount
of information is growing exponentially.
What can we do to stop the descent down the
slippery slope?
Integrating the use of the Internet in a user-friendly way with EBM online
resources can be helpful. A November 1999 issue of the British Medical
Journal dealt with new technologies in medicine. One of the leading articles
was about ‘cybermedicine’, a new academic speciality at the crossroads
of medical information and public health [9]. Its goals are studying the
application of the Internet to medicine and public health, examining the
impact of the Internet on health care, and evaluating future opportunities
and challenges for health care. The authors identify problems of the
Internet as a source of information as: the quality of the online
information, the lack of standards and the lack of social equity.
Currently there are more than 5 million websites, more than 320 million webpages, 150 million users, and more than 100,000 medical sites. The question is, how many of them are sufficiently reliable for health professionals to use? How can we find them? And which should we use for a particular problem?
The Haifa Family Medicine Department has initiated a programme combining the
Internet with EBM. The object of the programme is to open up a pathway for
as many physicians as possible to access updated medical information. The
components of the project are set out below.
Courses for physicians
Courses comprise basic training for physicians (especially older physicians)
in computer use, the necessary software and familiarity with the Internet.
We have already run 60 courses involving 1500 physicians in Israel. All
courses were conducted in special computer classes fully equipped to ensure
an effective and enjoyable experience. The courses were taught by medical
doctors with wide experience of the Internet, assisted by professional
computer instructors. They concentrate on teaching physicians how to use the
Internet as a working tool, by specifically teaching how to retrieve
reliable medical information from the Internet in a timely manner.
EBM training
This comprises courses that teach the EBM way of thinking and how to apply
EBM techniques. One of the leading courses is based on the idea of EBM as an
essential tool for family physicians. The aims of the course are asking and
solving common clinical questions, teaching the principles of EBM, and
encouraging self-learning and searching for medical data.
A class of 30 family physicians was divided into three groups: each group had to look for a solution to the same specific question but in a different database set. The first group looked for data in textbooks, the second asked for experts’ opinions, and the third group looked for EBM data on the Internet. One week was allowed for searching and then a discussion meeting was held to compare the results. Answers were adopted according to the level of evidence prepared, and were then posted on the department website. At the end of the course the class was given a questionnaire that inquired about their satisfaction with the course, improvement in analysing medical problems, in self-learning and in critical reading of medical data. All participants reported improvement in all these parameters.
The bottom line for the whole project is the medical library, which is available through our website: http://www.goldenhour.co.il (Figure 3).

Figure 3: The www.goldenhour.co.il
homepage.
The website in its current form is a huge
information centre built from hundreds of links to reliable medical websites
on the Internet, organised by nine topics visible on the left-hand side of
the screen. The main topics are:
1. EBM: contains EBM search engines. There are nine complementary search
engines, and a parallel search through each one of them can be very
efficient. Examples are the TRIP database, indexing 28 databases of EBM
information and providing links to evidence-based information through the
Internet [10] and the Cochrane database [11], which is an electronic library
resource with quarterly updates. It contains the collected work of the
Cochrane collaboration in abstract format (obstetricians and gynaecologists
can access the full text version through http://www.obgyn.net/cochrane.htm
for free, after registration). Although it does not contain any unique
medical information, it is a good starting point for finding evidence-based
information on major controversial topics in medicine.
2. Medline and Drug Search [12]: free Medline search engines: Healthgate,
Internet Greatfull Med, and PubMed. In 1999 there were 10.3 million Medline
citations with approximately 32,000 citations added each month. Given the
constant time constraints of clinicians’ schedules, physicians are often
frustrated when attempting to do a literature search. Using Medline requires
new skills and expertise and there is a different search strategy for
articles dealing with treatment, diagnosis, prevention or prognosis. We
highly recommend taking a course or personal tutorials in order to acquire
the expertise to carry out qualitative evidence-based searches.
In this section there is also drug information, detailed information
concerning diagnostic procedures and handy medical search engines.
3. Journals [13]: a long list of the known medical journals appearing on the
web. Some are in full-text format and some are in abstract form only. The
first journal to exploit the Internet was the British Medical Journal, which
started publishing an electronic edition in parallel to the hard copy in
April 1998. One can also find here the electronic edition of the American
Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology (abstracts/full text), the Journal of
the American Medical Association Women’s Health Information Center in full
text, the New England Journal of Medicine (abstracts/full text), and many
other journals from various fields of medicine. We look forward to seeing
more full-text journals in the near future.
Several secondary unique journals are available on the Internet providing
summaries of the leading and important publications worldwide. These
journals provide the study methods of the articles they review and the
criteria for selecting the studies. One of the leading journals that meets
these criteria is Bandolier, an electronic journal produced monthly in
Oxford for the UK National Health Service Research and Development
Directorate. It contains bullet points (hence Bandolier) of EBM. A sister
publication concentrates on women’s health [14].
4. Guidelines [15]: contains all the medical guidelines ever published on
the World Wide Web. Practice guidelines have proliferated in recent years
and have been of variable quality and value, depending largely on the
scientific accuracy of their development process. Recently, there has been a
growing tendency to arrange the guidelines by levels of evidence, from
systematic reviews to expert opinion (Table I).
5. Virtual books [16]: contains online medical books such as Merck Manual,
Textbook of Orthopedics (Wheeles), books on radiology (x-ray, CT, MRI),
dermatology and haematology.
6. Atlases [17]: comprises virtual libraries in anatomy, radiology and
pathology. Among the most impressive are ‘Obstetric Ultrasound Online’
and ‘Fetal Echocardiography’ (Figure 4).

Figure 4: Fetal echocardiography website.
7. The Best Links section [18] is divided into several disciplines, since
the number of medical sites is steadily increasing. In each discipline you
can find the best links for other websites, with endless medical
information.
Finally, beware of non-EBM information and be sure to re-evaluate any information obtained from an unfamiliar site.
“Beware non-EBM information and be sure to re-evaluate any information obtained from an unfamiliar site.”
A look to the future
As computer systems become widespread and easier to use in the clinic, the
hospital and at home, the potential to access information when needed is
enormous. For the present there is an immediate need for cooperation between
information technology companies, physicians, publishers, policy makers and
consumers in order to integrate the medical information system into a
unified information network delivering frequently updated, clinically
relevant, valid and evidence-based information.
When we have overcome these potential barriers, the rapid progress in technology will bring EBM straight to the patient’s bedside. Portable, small computers loaded with almost unlimited EBM information will be readily available to medical teams. It is quite realistic to expect that doctors will carry a portable, small computer with their stethoscope, and during their rounds in the department or clinic, will be able to key in a clinical question and receive a reliable answer within seconds.
Through our statistical web counter we have found that there has been a
continuous increase in daily visits to our site, from 80 per day 18 months
ago to 2000 per day during recent weeks. This ongoing feedback is an
incentive to further develop our project. In view of the rapidity of
technological development associated with the information explosion, the
reality of the future may be beyond our vision.
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18. http://www.goldenhour.co.il/best_medical_links.html