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The evidence base for neonatal surgery

The evidence base for neonatal surgery
The evidence base for neonatal surgery
The practise of evidence based medicine means integrating the clinical expertise with the best available external clinical evidence from systematic research. There is a lack of supporting scientific evidence from rigorous trials in neonatal surgery. The indications for surgery and the type of operation performed in neonates are rarely supported by randomised controlled trials. As a consequence, the majority of the operations performed in neonates are supported by retrospective studies and surgeon preference. This review article is focussed on operations in neonates which are performed by general paediatric surgeons. Only a few randomised controlled trials have been performed in neonatal diseases such as congenital diaphragmatic hernia, necrotizing enterocolitis, pyloric stenosis and inguinal hernia. All of these trials have been based on collaboration between paediatric surgical units highlighting the importance of creating a network of centres that will promote multicentre prospective studies.
randomised controlled trial, neonate, neonatal surgery, paediatric surgery, evidence based medicine
0378-3782
713-718
Hall, Nigel J.
6919e8af-3890-42c1-98a7-c110791957cf
Eaton, Simon
e14103c2-c06a-45e6-87fe-2358a3371283
Pierro, Agostino
74bd6b37-4305-47fd-847d-c19a08718997
Hall, Nigel J.
6919e8af-3890-42c1-98a7-c110791957cf
Eaton, Simon
e14103c2-c06a-45e6-87fe-2358a3371283
Pierro, Agostino
74bd6b37-4305-47fd-847d-c19a08718997

Hall, Nigel J., Eaton, Simon and Pierro, Agostino (2009) The evidence base for neonatal surgery. Early Human Development, 85 (11), 713-718. (doi:10.1016/j.earlhumdev.2009.08.058). (PMID:19748748)

Record type: Article

Abstract

The practise of evidence based medicine means integrating the clinical expertise with the best available external clinical evidence from systematic research. There is a lack of supporting scientific evidence from rigorous trials in neonatal surgery. The indications for surgery and the type of operation performed in neonates are rarely supported by randomised controlled trials. As a consequence, the majority of the operations performed in neonates are supported by retrospective studies and surgeon preference. This review article is focussed on operations in neonates which are performed by general paediatric surgeons. Only a few randomised controlled trials have been performed in neonatal diseases such as congenital diaphragmatic hernia, necrotizing enterocolitis, pyloric stenosis and inguinal hernia. All of these trials have been based on collaboration between paediatric surgical units highlighting the importance of creating a network of centres that will promote multicentre prospective studies.

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More information

Published date: November 2009
Keywords: randomised controlled trial, neonate, neonatal surgery, paediatric surgery, evidence based medicine
Organisations: Human Development & Health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 378466
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/378466
ISSN: 0378-3782
PURE UUID: 7d4b6388-9dab-4705-900a-3540efc60acf
ORCID for Nigel J. Hall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8570-9374

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 03 Jul 2015 13:17
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:38

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Contributors

Author: Nigel J. Hall ORCID iD
Author: Simon Eaton
Author: Agostino Pierro

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