G
Gordon H. Guyatt
Researcher at McMaster University
Publications - 1749
Citations - 262329
Gordon H. Guyatt is an academic researcher from McMaster University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Randomized controlled trial & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 231, co-authored 1620 publications receiving 228631 citations. Previous affiliations of Gordon H. Guyatt include Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center & Cayetano Heredia University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Introduction to BMJ Rapid Recommendations
Reed A C Siemieniuk,Reed A C Siemieniuk,Thomas Agoritsas,Helen Macdonald,Gordon H. Guyatt,Linn Brandt,Per Olav Vandvik,Per Olav Vandvik +7 more
TL;DR: New BMJ collaboration accelerates evidence into practice to answer the questions that matter quickly and transparently through trustworthy recommendations.
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Quality of life in patients with chronic respiratory disease: the Spanish version of the Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire (CRQ)
TL;DR: The Spanish translation of the Chronic Respiratory Questionnaire is likely to be useful for measuring differences between patients, and particularly for measuring the effects of intervention on quality of life in chronic respiratory disease.
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Users' guide to detecting misleading claims in clinical research reports
Victor M. Montori,Roman Jaeschke,Holger J. Schünemann,Mohit Bhandari,Jan Brozek,Philip J. Devereaux,Gordon H. Guyatt +6 more
TL;DR: Would you be able to identify misleading claims in a report of a well conducted study?
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GRADE guidelines 17: assessing the risk of bias associated with missing participant outcome data in a body of evidence
Gordon H. Guyatt,Shanil Ebrahim,Pablo Alonso-Coello,Bradley C. Johnston,Alexander G. Mathioudakis,Matthias Briel,Reem A. Mustafa,Xin Sun,Stephen D. Walter,Diane Heels-Ansdell,Ignacio Neumann,Lara A Kahale,Alfonso Iorio,Joerg J Meerpohl,Holger J. Schünemann,Elie A. Akl,Elie A. Akl +16 more
TL;DR: This work suggests that if the results of the primary meta-analysis are robust to the most extreme assumptions viewed as plausible, one does not rate down certainty in the evidence for risk of bias due to missing participant outcome data.
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What is evidence-based medicine?
TL;DR: Evidence-based practice requires clinical expertise, common sense, understanding of the circumstances and values of the patient, and judicious application of the best available evidence.