For individual research help, schedule an appointment to meet with a librarian.
When searching for evidence-based information, one should select the highest level of evidence possible--systematic reviews or meta-analysis. Systematic reviews, meta-analysis, and critically-appraised topics/articles have all gone through an evaluation process: they have been "filtered".
Information that has not been critically appraised is considered "unfiltered".
As you move up the pyramid, however, fewer studies are available; it's important to recognize that high levels of evidence may not exist for your clinical question. If this is the case, you'll need to move down the pyramid if your quest for resources at the top of the pyramid is unsuccessful.
Image Credit: Glover, Jan; Izzo, David; Odato, Karen & Lei Wang. EBM Pyramid. Dartmouth University/Yale University. 2006.
Different types of clinical questions are best answered by different types of research studies.
You might not always find the highest level of evidence (i.e., systematic review or meta-analysis) to answer your question. When this happens, work your way down the Evidence Pyramid to the next highest level of evidence.
This table suggests study designs best suited to answer each type of clinical question.
Clinical Question |
Suggested Research Design(s) |
All Clinical Questions |
Systematic review, meta-analysis |
Therapy |
Randomized controlled trial (RCT), meta-analysis |
Etiology |
Randomized controlled trial (RCT), meta-analysis, cohort study |
Diagnosis |
Randomized controlled trial (RCT) |
Prevention |
Randomized controlled trial (RCT), meta-analysis |
Prognosis |
Cohort study Also: case-control study, case series |
Meaning |
Qualitative study |
Quality Improvement |
Randomized controlled trial (RCT) |
Cost |
Economic evaluation |