Roles in Medical Case reports
A Case report in medicine is a thorough account of the symptoms, signs, diagnosis, treatment, and follow-up of a specific patient. Case reports typically describe an unusual or novel incident, though they may also include the patient's demographic description. Some case reports also include a review of previous reported cases in the literature. Case reports are expert narratives that offer commentary on clinical practise recommendations and provide a framework for early indicators of efficacy, unfavourable outcomes, and expense. They may be disseminated for therapeutic, academic, or research reasons. However, case reports do play legitimately beneficial roles in scientific inquiry and practice-based medicine. They have made it easier to identify novel diseases and the negative consequences of treatments.
Uses of case report
Case report proponents have listed several specific benefits of the format. Case reports and series continue to be one of the pillars of medical advancement since they are highly sensitive to detecting novelty and offer a wealth of innovative medical ideas. The case report can go into great detail about many various aspects of the patient's medical status, whereas randomised clinical trials typically only investigate one variable or very few factors, rarely portraying the complete picture of a difficult medical scenario.Use of case reports as scientific evidence must account for publication bias because common, unexceptional situations are less likely to be published. Case reports can be useful in medical education since they give case-based learning a framework.Case reports' scientific reporting quality varies, and poor reporting makes it difficult to utilise them to guide clinical practise or inform research design.
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