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BMJ Series

(1) Greenhalgh T. How to read a paper. Papers that report diagnostic or screening tests.[see comment][erratum appears in BMJ 1997 Oct 11;315(7113):942]. BMJ 315(7107):540-3, 1997 August 30.

(2) Greenhalgh T, Taylor R. Papers that go beyond numbers (qualitative research)[see comment]. BMJ 315(7110):740-3, 1997 September.

(3) Greenhalgh T. Papers that summarise other papers (systematic reviews and meta-analyses). BMJ 315(7109):672-5, 1997 September 13.

(4) Greenhalgh T. How to read a paper. Papers that tell you what things cost (economic analyses). BMJ 315(7108):596-9, 1997 September 6.

(5) Greenhalgh T. How to read a paper. Papers that report drug trials. BMJ 315(7106):480-3, 1997 August 23.

(6) Greenhalgh T. How to read a paper. Statistics for the non-statistician. II: "Significant" relations and their pitfalls. BMJ 315(7105):422-5, 1997 August 16.

(7) Greenhalgh T. Assessing the methodological quality of published papers.[see comment]. BMJ 315(7103):305-8, 1997 August 2.

(8) Greenhalgh T. How to read a paper. Statistics for the non-statistician. I: Different types of data need different statistical tests.[erratum appears in BMJ 1997 Sep 13;315(7109):675]. BMJ 315(7104):364-6, 1997 August 9.

(9) Greenhalgh T. How to read a paper. Getting your bearings (deciding what the paper is about).[see comment]. BMJ 315(7102):243-6, 1997 July 26.

(10) Greenhalgh T. How to read a paper. The Medline database.[see comment]. BMJ 315(7101):180-3, 1997 July.

Last Updated: 08 September 2009