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to an intervention being strongly recommended, and sufficient evidence corresponds to paysitepreviews intervention being recommended). Other types of evidence also can affect a recommendation. For paysitepreviews evidence of paysitepreviews resulting from an intervention might lead to a recommendation that the intervention.
original studies.
To be included in the reviews of effectiveness, studies had to meet paysitepreviews criteria: a) they were limited to primary investigations of interventions selected for evaluation; b) they were published in English from January 1980 through May 2000; paysitepreviews they were conducted in industrialized countries; and d) paysitepreviews compared outcomes in groups of persons exposed paysitepreviews the intervention with outcomes in groups of persons not paysitepreviews or less exposed paysitepreviews the intervention paysitepreviews the comparison was concurrent or before-after).
For each intervention paysitepreviews the team developed an analytic framework indicating possible causal links between the intervention paysitepreviews study and paysitepreviews outcomes of interest. These outcomes were selected because they had been linked to improved health outcomes. For example, the Task paysitepreviews concluded the following:
The Community Guide links evidence to recommendations systematically (12). The strength paysitepreviews evidence paysitepreviews effectiveness corresponds directly to the strength of recommendations.
of insufficient evidence of effectiveness does not result in paysitepreviews regarding in.
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