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- D Stengel, S Kirschner, A Ekkernkamp, and C Bartl.
- Unfallkrankenhaus Berlin, Warener Str. 7, 12683, Berlin, Deutschland. dirk.stengel@ukb.de.
- Unfallchirurg. 2016 Sep 1; 119 (9): 708-14.
AbstractThe article "Evidence based medicine: what it is and what it isn't" published in the BMJ in 1996, is regarded as the foundation of the evidence-based medicine (EbM) movement. Approximately 5 years later David L. Sackett, one of the leaders of the movement, requested all experts to voluntarily abandon their position to make way for young researchers and fresh ideas. Since the term was first coined and the establishment of organizations and platforms fostering the idea, EbM has polarized clinicians and scientists around the world. Clinical and methodological developments during recent years have, however, overtaken the original principles of EbM. This review highlights the core concepts of EbM which have remained unchanged and valid for the current practice of trauma and orthopedic surgery and where revision is needed.
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