Activities at Global Evidence Summit Cape Town - Sept 13-16 2017
Workshops:
How to author, publish and dynamically update digital and trustworthy evidence summaries, recommendations and decision aids through MAGICapp
Friday 15 September 2017 - 11:00 to 12:30 Meeting Room 2.61-2.62
Involving people in society and healthcare
Saturday 16 September 2017 - 14:00 to 15:30 Ballroom East
Presentations:
Living recommendations
From living systematic reviews to living recommendations
Wednesday 13 September 2017 - 11:00 to 12:30 Ballroom East
WikiRecs and BMJ RapidRecs
WikiRecs and BMJ RapidRecs: rapid and trustworthy recommendations that provide ingredients and tools for shared decision making
Wednesday 13 September 2017 - 14:00 to 15:30 Meeting Room 1.44
Evidence Ecosystem
Plenary 2 - Breaking Down the Silos: Digital and trustworthy evidence ecosystem
Thursday September 14 at 09:00-10:30, Auditorium 1,
and its sequential threaded special sessions 4-6 straight after, same place:
- 11:00-12:30: The inefficiency of isolation: Why evidence providers and evidence synthesisers can break out of their silos
- 14.00-15.30: From reviews to guidelines and point-of-care evidence use
- 16.00-17.30: Implementation, improved care and back again
Shared decision making and patient involvement
Special session: "Guidelines meet shared decision making. Happy ever after?"
Thursday 14 September 2017 - 11:00 to 12:30 Ballroom East
Obtaining absolute effect estimates to facilitate shared decision making in the context of multiple-treatment comparisons
Thursday 14 September 2017 - 16:00 to 17:30 Meeting Room 1.43
Looking to the future evidence infrastructure at NICE: Research surveillance, synthesis and use
Matching guideline questions to Cochrane Review questions – a linked data test case
Innovative patient partnership in creating trustworthy guidelines, from protocol to publication: Case studies of BMJ Rapid Recommendations
Traditional-intensive versus technology-enhanced approach for search and screening in systematic reviews (TITE project)
User preferences regarding online tools for systematic review and guideline production: Results from a G-I-N Tech Survey