H
Hilda Bastian
Researcher at National Institutes of Health
Publications - 59
Citations - 2938
Hilda Bastian is an academic researcher from National Institutes of Health. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Systematic review. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 59 publications receiving 2613 citations. Previous affiliations of Hilda Bastian include Bond University & Institute for Quality and Efficiency in Health Care.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Seventy-Five Trials and Eleven Systematic Reviews a Day: How Will We Ever Keep Up?
TL;DR: Hilda Bastian and colleagues examine the extent to which critical summaries of clinical trials can be used by health professionals and the public.
Journal ArticleDOI
PRISMA for Abstracts: Reporting Systematic Reviews in Journal and Conference Abstracts
Elaine Beller,Paul Glasziou,Douglas G. Altman,Sally Hopewell,Sally Hopewell,Hilda Bastian,Iain Chalmers,Peter C Gøtzsche,Toby J Lasserson,David Tovey +9 more
TL;DR: Elaine Beller and colleagues from the PRISMA for Abstracts group provide a reporting guidelines for reporting abstracts of systematic reviews in journals and at conferences.
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Effects of treatment in women with gestational diabetes mellitus : systematic review and meta-analysis
Karl Horvath,Klaus Koch,Klaus Jeitler,Eva Matyas,Ralf Bender,Hilda Bastian,Stefan Lange,Andrea Siebenhofer +7 more
TL;DR: Treatment for gestational diabetes, consisting of treatment to lower blood glucose concentration alone or with special obstetric care, seems to lower the risk for some perinatal complications.
Journal ArticleDOI
Taking healthcare interventions from trial to practice
Paul Glasziou,Iain Chalmers,Douglas G. Altman,Hilda Bastian,Isabelle Boutron,Anne Brice,Gro Jamtvedt,Andrew Farmer,Davina Ghersi,Trish Groves,Carl Heneghan,Sophie Hill,Simon Lewin,Susan Michie,Rafael Perera,Valerie M. Pomeroy,Julie K. Tilson,Sasha Shepperd,John W Williams +18 more
TL;DR: The results of thousands of trials are never acted on because their published reports do not describe the interventions in enough detail, so how can the reporting be improved?
Journal ArticleDOI
Integrating patients' views into health technology assessment: Analytic hierarchy process (AHP) as a method to elicit patient preferences.
Marion Danner,J. Marjan Hummel,Fabian Volz,Jeanette Gabrielle van Manen,Beate Wiegard,Charalabos-Markos Dintsios,Hilda Bastian,Andreas Gerber,Maarten Joost IJzerman +8 more
TL;DR: AHP can be used in HTA to give a quantitative dimension to patients' preferences for treatment endpoints and could provide important information at various stages of HTA and challenge opinions on the importance of endpoints.