CHAPTER 7 Having Designs on Study Design 91
Starting at the base: Expert opinion
At the base of the study design evidence pyramid shown Figure 7-2 is a descriptive
study design: expert opinion. When the condition of dementia was first identified,
few clinicians had seen patients with dementia. These clinicians served as experts
who would write about the dementia patients they treated and share their experi-
ences at medical conferences. This is what is meant by expert opinion, and while
it is helpful when conditions are first identified, expert opinion is considered a
very weak descriptive study design.
Making the case with case studies
Also at the base of Figure 7-2 are case studies and case series. To develop an
understanding of dementia when it was first identified, clinicians treating patients
needed to study them. They would write up case studies or case reports on individual
patients describing their symptoms and providing the best descriptive evidence as
possible. If the clinician was able to identify more than one patient, they could
write about a series of patients, which is known as a case series. While case studies
and case series are helpful for researchers when a condition is first identified, they
are considered as providing very weak evidence to use for causal inference.
FIGURE 7-2:
Levels
of evidence in
study designs.
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