Some health professionals possess a learning style preference or logistical need for more self-directed choices. These include traditional sources, such as textbooks, that provide clinical information. Important developments to aid self-directed learning have included the advent of printed or computerized self-assessment programs, which provide learners with feedback about their competence as they read materials and answer questions.
- Buy the book
- Table of Contents
- Summarized book content
- Introduction to Knowledge Translation
- Knowledge Creation
- Knowledge Synthesis
- The Review Team
- Formulating the Question, Eligibility Criteria, and Protocol
- Finding Relevant Studies
- Selecting Studies for Inclusion
- Assessing Risk of Bias of Included Studies
- Extracting Data from the Individual Studies
- Analyzing the Data
- Presenting the Results of the Review
- Interpreting the Results
- Disseminating the Results of the Review
- Increasing Uptake of Review Results
- Knowledge Translation Tools
- Knowledge Dissemination
- Knowledge Synthesis
- The Action Cycle
- Teaching Resources
- About the Authors