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Matthew J. Page

Researcher at Monash University

Publications -  165
Citations -  48068

Matthew J. Page is an academic researcher from Monash University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Systematic review & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 43, co-authored 128 publications receiving 12149 citations. Previous affiliations of Matthew J. Page include University of Bristol & Monash University, Clayton campus.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Recruitment difficulties in a primary care cluster randomised trial: investigating factors contributing to general practitioners' recruitment of patients

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated factors that contributed to general practitioners recruitment of patients in a professional-cluster trial which evaluated the effectiveness of an intervention to increase general practitioners adherence to a clinical practice guideline for acute low-back pain.
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Ergonomic positioning or equipment for treating carpal tunnel syndrome

TL;DR: There is insufficient evidence from randomised controlled trials to determine whether ergonomic positioning or equipment is beneficial or harmful for treating carpal tunnel syndrome.
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Mass Production of Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses: An Exercise in Mega-silliness?

TL;DR: A provocative article by John Ioannidis suggests that “mega-silliness” may be an appropriate characterization of what the meta-analysis literature has become, and presents an astounding case of 21 different meta-analyses of statins for atrial fibrillation in cardiac surgery published within a period of 7 years.
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Core domain and outcome measurement sets for shoulder pain trials are needed: systematic review of physical therapy trials.

TL;DR: The results provide the foundation for the development of a core domain and outcome measurement set for use in future shoulder pain trials and a wide diversity in the domains and measurement instruments reported.
Reference EntryDOI

Rehabilitation following carpal tunnel release (Review)

TL;DR: The effectiveness of rehabilitation following CTS surgery compared with no treatment, placebo, or another intervention is reviewed to assess the limited evidence of the effectiveness of postoperative rehabilitation interventions.