Evidently Cochrane

Supportive care for people with brain tumours

2 years 5 months ago

In a blog for anyone with an interest in brain tumours, brainstrust Director of Services and Cochrane Review author Helen Bulbeck reflects on supportive care, what it is, what research tells us about the current state of play with supportive care, and what people living with brain tumours might find helpful.

The post Supportive care for people with brain tumours appeared first on Evidently Cochrane.

Helen Bulbeck

My OCD journey 2: learning and compassion in tough times

2 years 5 months ago

In this blog, Karen Morley, who in 2018 wrote for Evidently Cochrane about her experiences of OCD (obsessive compulsive disorder) and how evidence helped her, tells us what has happened since, including the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on her mental health, the challenges, and things she has found empowering.

The post My OCD journey 2: learning and compassion in tough times appeared first on Evidently Cochrane.

Karen Morley

Epilepsy: what are the best medications?

2 years 5 months ago

In this blog for people making choices about epilepsy medication, Dr Alexandre Mathy, a neurology registrar at Oxford University Hospitals, explains what the latest Cochrane evidence tells us about which medications may be most effective and best tolerated for people with focal seizures or generalised onset tonic‐clonic seizures. 

The post Epilepsy: what are the best medications? appeared first on Evidently Cochrane.

Alexandre Mathy

Cataract surgery: both eyes on the same day or on different days?

2 years 6 months ago

People who need cataract surgery on both eyes may wonder whether it is better to have them done on the same day or on different days. Sarah Chapman looks at the Cochrane evidence on how the two approaches compare and discusses what else might be important to consider.

The post Cataract surgery: both eyes on the same day or on different days? appeared first on Evidently Cochrane.

Sarah Chapman

Personal experiences or anecdotes (stories) are an unreliable basis for assessing the effects of most treatments

2 years 6 months ago

This blog explains why personal experience, or a series of personal experiences, can be misleading. Just because an individual got better after using a treatment does not mean that other people who receive the same treatment will also improve, or that the treatment is responsible – ‘regression to the mean’ tells us that experiences such as pain may improve anyway without treatment.

The post Personal experiences or anecdotes (stories) are an unreliable basis for assessing the effects of most treatments appeared first on Evidently Cochrane.

Elaine Finucane

Preparing for an operation with lifestyle changes

2 years 6 months ago

In this blog for people waiting for an operation, Dr Rebecca Gould, Cochrane UK Fellow and Sport and Exercise Medicine Registrar, explores some of the lifestyle changes people can make to prior to an operation and Brian Devlin, Cochrane UK Consumer Champion, shares his own experiences of getting ready for an operation.

The post Preparing for an operation with lifestyle changes appeared first on Evidently Cochrane.

Rebecca Gould

Drugs for agitation in people with dementia: benefits and risks

2 years 7 months ago

In this blog for the families of people with dementia, Doctors Charlotte Squires and James Garrard talk about drugs used to treat symptoms of agitation and psychosis in people with diagnosed dementia, and what doctors and families together might want to consider when making decisions about trying these treatments.

The post Drugs for agitation in people with dementia: benefits and risks appeared first on Evidently Cochrane.

Charlotte Squires

Preventing asthma deaths in school children: 3 things to know

2 years 7 months ago

With deaths from asthma attacks the highest they have been in a decade, GP Robin Carr blogs about three things you need to know that can reduce the risk of death from asthma in school-aged children, and shares a film 'Preventable’, made with teenagers about preventing asthma deaths in schools.

The post Preventing asthma deaths in school children: 3 things to know appeared first on Evidently Cochrane.

Robin Carr
Checked
16 hours ago
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