Formulating Research Questions
EBP steps Formulate a clinically relevant and answerable question Find the best evidence Evaluate the evidence Integrate with clinical expertise and patient values and apply to your patient Evaluate your performance
Aims of this Step To learn how to define an answerable research question To gain an understanding of the different types of clinical questions you may ask To be able to translate ideas from your workplace into well-defined questions
Benefits of a Clearly Defined Research Question Helps to clarify the problem in your own mind Can help you to search for the kind of evidence you need to answer it Will help you to search more effectively Can save you a great deal of search time
Forming an Answerable Question (PICO/PECO) Break the question down into parts: Population Intervention/Exposure Comparison Outcome
PICO/PECO Component Key step Example Patient Problem population Intervention / Exposure (test, treatment, process of care) Comparison or alternative Outcome How would I succinctly describe a group of similar patients? What is the main action I am considering? What is/are the other option(s)? What do I/the patients want or not want to happen? In children under 12 years with condition x would adding drug Y to their current therapy compared to increasing the dose of their current therapy lead to increased control with no increase in side effects?
Population Try to be as specific as possible. Make sure you are describing the patients or problem that you are interested in. This may be too specific when searching, but it is a good start point.
Population Factors that might need to be considered: Disease or condition of interest Age Sex Suffering similar symptoms Setting
Intervention or Exposure? An intervention is something planned to be done to be a patient/client Exposure occurs when the patient/client comes into contact with something e.g. exposure to a smoky atmosphere. Exposure is usually naturally occurring
Intervention/Exposure These may include: Treatment regime Diagnostic test Specific risk factors Differing environments/settings Advice or information package
Intervention/Exposure Try to be as specific as possible with the intervention at this stage You can always back track later if you can t find any evidence
Comparison What is/are the other options or alternatives that could be offered to the patient/client? You may compare two or more groups One is often known as the control group The other group can be another treatment group The other group can be current practice
Outcomes Identify the outcomes that are of primary importance to you and the patient/client e.g. Survival Disease Quality of life
Activity Try to identify the individual PICO / PECO components for each of the following scenarios. And Formulate a research question for each scenario.
Scenario 1 A 40 year old woman visits her GP complaining of moderate depression. She has experienced bouts of depression in the past and was prescribed a traditional antidepressant which she feels was helpful. However, she experienced some unpleasant side effects with the drug she was prescribed. She has recently been told by a friend about the use of St John s Wort in treating depression and feels she would like to try this in treating her current depression.
Scenario 2 A 35-year-old man is recovering from surgery after injuring his hand while cleaning the blades of his lawnmower. He holds a managerial position with a local manufacturer, working to some very short deadlines, and his injury could not have come at a worst time. He needs his hand to be fully functioning, but is concerned that the time he may have to spend in rehabilitation will have a negative effect on his business. The physiotherapist believes that a favourable outcome would be best achieved through early physiotherapy management of his hand, but needs to convince him that such an investment of his time is likely to prove effective. (Adapted from Booth and Madge, 1998)
Scenario 3 You are a member of a research team interested in the long term consequences on children of living in a family where domestic violence occurs. You are keen to formulate a set of focussed research questions to guide your research. Try and formulate one such question.
Scenario 4 You are a member of a regional Tobacco Strategy Group. The group is considering what support it gives and should give people who want to stop smoking. General practitioners have previously been holding a smoking cessation clinic and a Health Promotion nurse offers individual support. A debate follows about the place of nicotine replacement therapy (NRT). Some people argue that it is useful, others that will-power is enough. One suggestion could be to spend savings within general practices on supplying people with nicotine replacement therapy on prescription but there is some resistance to this approach. You want to find out whether NRT is effective.
Scenario 1 Example response P 40 year old woman with moderate depression I St John s wort C Prozac O Depressive symptoms and side effects Question: For a 40 year old female with moderate depression, what is the efficacy and tolerability of St John s wort compared to Prozac?
Scenario 2 Example response P 35 year old male with hand injury that has undergone surgical repair I Early physiotherapy C Other forms of physiotherapy O full restoration of hand functioning Question: In a 35-year old male patient, not a manual worker, with a hand injury that has undergone surgical repair, does early physiotherapy management of the hand, when compared with other forms of physiotherapy management, lead to full restoration of the hand?
Scenario 3 Example response P Children aged 16 years E Living in a family where domestic violence occurs C Living in a family where domestic violence does not occur O Educational attainment Question: Is living in a family where domestic violence occurs associated with reduced educational attainment in children aged 16 years?
Scenario 4 Example response P Smokers who want to stop smoking I Nicotine Replacement Therapy C Other support O Smoking cessation Question: For smokers who want to stop smoking, does nicotine replacement therapy, when compared with patients relying on other means of support, increase their chance of giving up smoking?
PICO/PECO May not always be appropriate to specify an intervention, but population and outcomes can usually be identified. For complex problems, it will be necessary to map out all component parts and ask a series of questions.
SPICE S Setting In which context are you addressing the question? P Perspective Who are the participants? I Intervention What is being done to/for them? C Comparison What are your alternatives? E Evaluation How will you measure whether the intervention has succeeded? An alternative framework to consider when the building a relevant question is using SPICE.
SPICE Scenario You are working on an ESRC funded project looking at the benefits of a doula (a woman experienced in childbirth who provides continuous physical, emotional and informational support to the mother before, during and just after childbirth) for low income mothers.
SPICE example Setting the developed world (with comparable health systems to the UK) Population low income mothers Intervention Doula Comparison Professional support (or no support) Evaluation Perceived levels of social support, birth outcomes, levels of breastfeeding etc.
Another SPICE Scenario You are a Health Psychologist wanting to study the psychological problems encountered by people preparing for heart surgery. Have a go at formulating a set of SPICE components
SPICE example Setting - Awaiting surgery Population - Patients Intervention Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery Comparison None Evaluation Uncertainty and Anxiety
Broad or Narrow Questions? Broad Do complimentary therapies work in the treatment of psychological disorders? Narrow Is St John s wort effective in treating moderate depression in females aged 30-40 years?
Types of Clinical Questions
Types of Research Question Effectiveness Causal Incidence/Prevalence Screening Diagnostic Prognosis Cost-effectiveness Psycho-social
Effectiveness Questions These usually evaluate methods of treatment E.g. Is radical surgery better (more effective) than conservative surgery in treatment of breast cancer?
Causal Questions These determine the cause of a disease or adverse effects caused by specific treatments E.g. What are the underlying factors that cause lung cancer?
Incidence/Prevalence Questions These determine population prevalence/incidence of disease or characteristics of a disease etc. E.g. How many woman have cervical cancer(prevalence)? How many new cases of dementia in the elderly were recorded last year (incidence)?
Screening Questions Where a specific screening programme is evaluated E.g. Does cervical screening reduce deaths?
Diagnostic Questions Where different types of tests are evaluated E.g. How effective is the nuchal translucency scan in detecting foetuses with chromosomal abnormities?
Prognosis Questions These estimate the likely progress of the patient/client's condition E.g. If you sprain your ankle playing sport are you more likely to have a recurrent sprains / unstable ankles?
Cost-effectiveness Questions Where the economics of health care is evaluated: E.g. Is a short term (expensive) course of drugs for ulcers better than a long term (cheaper) course of drugs, knowing that the short term course of drugs is slightly more effective?
Psycho-social Questions Where knowledge, attitude and behaviour patterns are associated with psycho-social factors: E.g. Do patients prefer to be involved in decisionmaking about their treatment?
Generating Your Own Research Questions
Generating Questions Questions you ask may arise from: Your individual professional work A group initiative A topical issue A national initiative A professional desire A patient/client s query
Problems relevant to a range of practitioners Needing help in diagnosing a particular condition Needing to find out more about the benefits and possible adverse effects of a particular intervention Audit results showing poor outcomes A prominent issue is taken up by the media and causes concern to service users Comparing the costs and benefits of different therapies Patients/clients ask about a treatment of which you do not know the answer
Steps to Building a Focused Question Jot down ideas as they occur. Examine later and see whether you need to spend time exploring further. Take time to refine your question using the PICO / PECO formula. Consider various possible alternative outcomes or interventions. Include the alternatives when performing your searches. Decide what type of clinical question you are asking.