A guide to writing and using case reports
A thematic series published in Journal of Medical Case Reports.
A valuable resource for clinicians in the form of a special series of editorials, which comprise a guide to writing and using case reports.
Another important publication in the journal for reference when writing and using case reports is, “A guide to writing case reports for the Journal of Medical Case Reports and BioMed Central Research Notes”, which was published in 2013 and written by Richard Rison.
- EDITORIALJournal of Medical Case Reports 2016 10:87Published on: 6 April 2016
- EDITORIAL
How to write a neurology case report
Neurology case reports have a long history of transmitting important medical information across many generations for the improvement of patient care. Case reports contribute much to the physician’s knowledge b...Journal of Medical Case Reports 2016 10:91Published on: 6 April 2016 - EDITORIAL
How to apply case reports in clinical practice using surrogate models via example of the trigeminocardiac reflex
Case reports are an increasing source of evidence in clinical medicine. Until a few years ago, such case reports were emerged into systematic reviews and nowadays they are often fitted to the development of cl...Journal of Medical Case Reports 2016 10:84Published on: 6 April 2016 - EDITORIAL
Case reports in medical education: a platform for training medical students, residents, and fellows in scientific writing and critical thinking
A case report is a detailed narrative that usually illustrates a diagnostic or therapeutic problem experienced by one or several patients. Case reports commonly serve as the first line of evidence for new inte...Journal of Medical Case Reports 2016 10:86Published on: 6 April 2016 - EDITORIALJournal of Medical Case Reports 2016 10:92Published on: 6 April 2016
- EDITORIALJournal of Medical Case Reports 2016 10:88Published on: 6 April 2016
- EDITORIAL
How to apply clinical cases and medical literature in the framework of a modified “failure mode and effects analysis” as a clinical reasoning tool – an illustration using the human biliary system
Clinicians use various clinical reasoning tools such as Ishikawa diagram to enhance their clinical experience and reasoning skills. Failure mode and effects analysis, which is an engineering methodology in ori...Journal of Medical Case Reports 2016 10:85Published on: 6 April 2016
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