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Users' guides to the medical literature. VIII. How to use clinical practice guidelines. A. Are the recommendations valid? The Evidence-Based Medicine Working Group
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1995
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Reproductive SciencesGynecologyClinical GuidelinesClinical Practice GuidelinesGynecology OncologyOvarian CancerVulvar DiseasesSimilar PatientsLast PatientAcute DysuriaGeriatric UrologyUrogynecologyBreast SurgeryMedical GuidelineMedical LiteratureUrological ResearchClinical GuidanceFemale UrologyEvidence-based RecommendationNursingUrologyGynecological SurgeryPatient SafetyBreast CancerMenopauseClinical PracticeMedicineEvidence-based PracticeWomen's Health
<h3>CLINICAL SCENARIO</h3> You are relieved to find that the last patient in your busy primary care clinic is a previously well 48-year-old woman with acute dysuria. There has been no polydipsia, fever, or hematuria; the physical examination reveals suprapubic tenderness; and urinalysis shows pyuria but no casts. You arrange cultures and antibiotic treatment for a lower urinary tract infection. On her way out the door, your patient observes that her friend has just started taking "female hormones," and she wonders whether she should too. Her menstrual periods stopped 6 months ago and she has never had cervical, ovarian, uterine, breast, or cardiovascular problems, but her mother had a mastectomy at age 57 for postmenopausal breast cancer. You give the same general advice you have offered similar patients in the past, but suggest that the matter be discussed at greater length when she returns after completing the antibiotic treatment. Later, as