German Network for Evidence Based Medicine explained

German Network for Evidence Based Medicine(DNEbM)
Abbreviation:DNEbM
Type:German NPO
Purpose:Promoting evidence-based health care
Headquarters:Berlin, Germany
Region Served:Germany, Austria, Switzerland
Language:German
Leader Title:Chairperson
Affiliations:International Society for Evidence Based Healthcare
Website:www.dnebm.de

The German Network for Evidence based Medicine (in German: Deutsches Netzwerk Evidenzbasierte Medizin DNEbM) is a scientific nonprofit association of individuals and institutions promoting the quality of patient care and disease prevention by applying the principles of evidence-based healthcare (EbHC) - in special dentistry (EbD), medicine (EbM), nursing (EbN), pharmacy, physiotherapy - in the countries of German language.

Being a multiprofessional community, DNEbM provides an interdisciplinary discussion and communication forum for health care providers, patients and consumers, health care scientists, managers and political decision makers regarding all aspects of EbM&N/EbHC.

Membership

The network's membership consists of nearly 800 individuals and more than 50 institutions working in the field of evidence-based healthcare or endorsing it, among them the German Cochrane Center, the German Agency for Quality in Medicine (AEZQ/AQuMed), and the IQWIG.

Organization

DNEbM is a charity, according to German law, with a board of trustees, whose members are elected by the annual general meeting every second year. The board’s executive committee, comprising chair, 1st and 2nd vice-chair, treasurer, oversee the day-to-day activities, organized by the Berlin-based secretariat (executive officer, administrative secretary, webmaster).

Mission

The network's aims and goals are to

Activities

DNEbM’s annual scientific congresses have been the key event for individuals and organisations interested in EbHC/EbM&N science and education.Presentations are peer reviewed, and – if accepted – published in the bi-lingual open access journal eGMS.[1]

The peer-reviewed German Journal for Evidence and Quality in Healthcare, founded in 1904 as Zeitschrift für ärztliche Fortbildung, is DNEbM’s official organ. ZEFQ is also the German-language organ of the Guidelines International Network G-I-N.

Main carrier for the network’s everyday knowledge management and information transfer is DNEbM’s website www.dnebm.de, offering news services as well as open access and members-only information and supported by social networking facilities such as Facebook and Twitter.

Since the network’s foundation, DNEbM members, working in organizations and committees being responsible for defining health care benefits as well as for patient safety programmes, have been promoting EbHC. Furthermore, the network's discussion, training, and information programmes were helpful in disseminating EbHC ideas in Germany and Austria. Over a decade methods, challenges and barriers of EbHC tools such as systematic reviews, guidelines have been discussed within the framework of DNEbM.Members of the network edited the first German-language textbooks on EbM/EbN.[2] A national EbM curriculum for medical postgraduate education and professional development is another of the deliveries, developed within the DNEbM.[3]

Austrian members of the network initiated a special website on EbM in Austria in 2010.[4]

Recent activities focus on the topics “conflict of interest”, “individualized medicine”, “implementation of clinical practice guidelines”.

DNEbM Awards

In 2008 DNEbM established the David Sackett Award with D.S.’s endorsement. The DSA is for ambitious and creative scientific EbHC / EbM / EbN projects that engage people with developments in that field on a regional, national or international scale. In 2009 the DNEbM Journalist Prize was added.

Affiliations

Since 2004, DNEbM has been member of the German Association of Scientific Medical Societies AWMF, umbrella organization of the more than 150 German "learned societies".

External links

Notes and References

  1. German Medical Science. Open access journal eGMS (retrieved 5 April 2011
  2. R. Kunz, G. Ollenschläger, H. Raspe, G. Jonitz, N. Donner-Banzhoff (Edts.): Lehrbuch Evidenzbasierte Medizin in Klinik und Praxis. 2. Auflage. Deutscher Ärzte-Verlag, Köln 2007,
  3. DNEbM: Curriculum Evidence-based Medicine - in German retrieved 23 March 2012
  4. http://www.ebm-netzwerk.at DNEbM: Online information on evidence-based medicine for Austria