Jump to: Page Content, Site Navigation, Site Search,
You are seeing this message because your web browser does not support basic web standards. Find out more about why this message is appearing and what you can do to make your experience on this site better.
BMJ 2004;328:529 (28 February), doi:10.1136/bmj.328.7438.529
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
Archie Cochrane was an epidemiologist with a maverick streak. In 1935, as a lone medical student, he marched through London carrying a home made placard that read, "All effective treatments must be free." According to him, nobody noticed. In this seminal book, first published in 1972 by the Nuffield Provincial Hospitals Trust and issued in this imprint in 1999, he called for an international register of randomised controlled trials, and for explicit quality criteria for appraising published research, but neither goal was achieved in his lifetime. Today, the Cochrane Controlled Trials Register has more than 400 000 entries, and an international movement to improve the methodology of research synthesis also bears his name (www.cochrane.org/index0.htm).
|
|
A L Cochrane Royal Society of Medicine Press, £12, pp 120 1 85315 394 X www.rsmpress.co.uk/bkcochra.htm
Rating:
|
A passionate early advocate of the NHS, Cochrane described it in Effectiveness and Efficiency as "a favourite
Trisha Greenhalgh, professor of primary health care
University College London
Read all Rapid Responses