The Annals of Family Medicine encourages readers to develop a learning community of those seeking to improve health care and health through enhanced primary care. You can participate by conducting a RADICAL journal club and sharing the results of your discussions in the Annals online discussion for the featured articles. RADICAL is an acronym for Read, Ask, Discuss, Inquire, Collaborate, Act, and Learn. The word radical also indicates the need to engage diverse participants in thinking critically about important issues affecting primary care and then acting on those discussions.1
HOW IT WORKS
In each issue, the Annals selects an article or articles and provides discussion tips and questions. We encourage you to take a RADICAL approach to these materials and to post a summary of your conversation in our online discussion. (Open the article online and click on “TRACK Comments: Submit a response.”) You can find discussion questions and more information online at: http://www.AnnFamMed.org/AJC/.
CURRENT SELECTION
Article for Discussion
Discussion Tips
This cohort study gives us a chance to see the big picture about abdominal pain in children that otherwise would become apparent only across a professional lifetime and then only with great attention.
Discussion Questions
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What are the study’s research questions and hypotheses, and why do they matter?
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How does this study advance beyond previous research and clinical practice on this topic?
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How strong is the study design for answering the question?
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To what degree can the findings be accounted for by:
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How patients were selected, excluded, or lost to follow-up over multiple time points?
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How the main variables were measured?
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Confounding (false attribution of causality because 2 variables discovered to be associated actually are associated with a 3rd factor)?
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Chance?
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How the findings were interpreted?
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How were possible biases controlled for in analyses?
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How do the sensitivity analyses affect your confidence in the findings?
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What are the main study findings?
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Does it surprise you how often pain is chronic among children complaining of abdominal pain?
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How comparable is the study sample to similar patients in your practice? What is your judgment about the transportability of the findings?
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How might the findings of this study affect your diagnostic approach to children complaining of abdominal pain?
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How might the findings of this study influence how you talk with parents and children complaining of abdominal pain?
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How might this study change your practice?
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What researchable questions remain?
- © 2013 Annals of Family Medicine, Inc.