| Literature DB >> 24416692 |
Joel J Gagnier1, Gunver Kienle2, Douglas G Altman3, David Moher4, Harold Sox5, David Riley6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A case report is a narrative that describes, for medical, scientific, or educational purposes, a medical problem experienced by one or more patients. Case reports written without guidance from reporting standards are insufficiently rigorous to guide clinical practice or to inform clinical study design. PRIMARYEntities:
Keywords: Case report; EQUATOR Network; case study; health research reporting guidelines; meaningful use; patient reports
Year: 2013 PMID: 24416692 PMCID: PMC3833570 DOI: 10.7453/gahmj.2013.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Adv Health Med ISSN: 2164-9561
The CARE Guidelines
The Narrative: A case report tells a story in a narrative format that includes the presenting concerns, clinical findings, diagnoses, interventions, outcomes (including adverse events), and follow-up. The narrative should include a discussion of the rationale for anyconclusions and any takeaway messages.
| ITEM NAME | ITEM NO. | BRIEF DESCRIPTION |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | The words | |
| 2 | The key elements of this case in 2 to 5 words | |
| 3 |
Introduction—What does this case add? Case Presentation: Main symptoms of the patient Main clinical findings Main diagnoses and interventions Main outcomes Conclusion—What were the main takeaway lessons from this case? | |
| 4 | Brief background summary of this case referencing the relevant medical literature | |
| 5 |
Demographic information (eg, age, gender, ethnicity, occupation) Main symptoms of the patient (his or her chief complaints) Medical, family, and psychosocial history—including diet, lifestyle, and genetic information whenever possible and details about relevant comorbidities including past interventions and their outcomes | |
| 6 | Describe the relevant physical examination (PE) findings | |
| 7 | Depict important dates and times in this case (table or figure) | |
| 8 |
Diagnostic methods (eg, PE, laboratory testing, imaging, questionnaires) Diagnostic challenges (eg, financial, language/cultural) Diagnostic reasoning including other diagnoses considered Prognostic characteristics (eg, staging) where applicable | |
| 9 |
Types of intervention (eg, pharmacologic, surgical, preventive, self-care) Administration of intervention (eg, dosage, strength, duration) Changes in intervention (with rationale) | |
| 10 | Summarize the clinical course of all follow-up visits, including
Clinician- and patient-assessed outcomes Important follow-up test results (positive or negative) Intervention adherence and tolerability (and how this was assessed) Adverse and unanticipated events | |
| 11 |
Strengths and limitations of the management of this case Relevant medical literature Rationale for conclusions (including assessments of cause and effect) Main takeaway lessons of this case report | |
| 12 | The patient should share his or her perspective or experience whenever possible | |
| 13 | Did the patient give informed consent? Please provide if requested |