TRIP Database

TRIP Database Trip is a tool for you to find and use high-quality clinical research evidence. Any search performed in TRIP fetches results from a number of resources like the Cochrane Library, Evidence Summaries, individual journals and more. Once the results are displayed, one can filter them by TRIP's filters - either secondary research (systematic reviews, guidelines etc) or primary research - (Journal articles, Trials etc) or basic information from textbooks. Results can be further refined in a number of ways, saved, and exported.Apart from such evidence based resources, TRIP fetches results from other resource categories - Images, Videos, Education, Patient…
Read More

Resource: Therapeutic Guidelines

Resource: Therapeutic Guidelines - http://www.tg.org.au/Therapeutic Guidelines is a resource from Australia. It has a set of guidelines on several topics, written principally for prescribers (general practitioners and trainee physicians in particular) to provide clear, practical, succinct and up-to-date therapeutic information, for the management of patients with specific conditions. They cover all common disorders seen in clinical practice. Topics and sections are arranged according to diagnostic entities. Each section gives sufficient surrounding information to orient the reader, followed by succinct and explicit recommendations for therapy. The website specifies that the Guidelines are not primarily meant to instruct, but rather to assist…
Read More
Cases Database – a Database of Case Reports

Cases Database – a Database of Case Reports

Cases Database Available at www.casedatabase.com, Cases Database, is database of thousands of medical case reports from multiple publishers, including Springer, BMJ and PubMed Central. Freely accessible and  continuously-updated, this is an initiative of  the Open Access Publisher - Biomed Central.  (As of 6 Aug 2013 - 27784 peer-reviewed medical case reports from 250 journals) The About US section of the Cases Database mentions "Documenting a patient's case history to inform physicians how the patient has been evaluated and the subsequent progression of his or her disease is arguably the oldest method of communicating medical evidence. And in the 21st century case reports play an equally important…
Read More