The PICO framework is a format for developing an answerable clinical research question prior to starting your research. The question needs to identify the patient or population we intend to study, the intervention or treatment we plan to use, the comparison of one intervention to another (if applicable) and the outcome we anticipate. These make up the four elements of the PICO model: Patient / Problem, Intervention, Comparison and Outcome.
The example question used for this: In adolescents with eating disorders, how does Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) compare to Family Based Therapy (FBT) in improving eating disorder symptoms?
P |
Population OR Patient OR Problem What are the characteristics of the patient or population? OR What is the condition or disease you are interested in? |
Adolescents with eating disorders |
I |
Intervention OR Exposure What do you want to do with the patient? (e.g. treat, diagnose, observe etc.?) |
Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT) |
C |
Comparison OR Comparator What is the alternative to the treatment (e.g. placebo, different drug, surgery)? |
Family Based Therapy (FBT) |
O |
Outcome What is the relevant outcome (e.g. morbidity, complications)? |
Improvement in eating disorder symptoms |
Quick Tip: There is no one "correct" way to construct a PICO question. Your clinical question should include elements specific to each client's unique circumstances and values. |
Research questions for quantitative reviews are often mapped using structures such as PICO. Some qualitative reviews adopt this structure, or use an adapted variation of such a structure:
SPIDER This tool offers a systematic strategy for searching |
(S) Sample size (PI) Phenomenon of Interest (D) Study Design (E) Evaluation (R) Research type |
SPICE SPICE builds upon PICO in two ways. First, the population component (Booth, 2006) |
Setting – where? Perspective – for whom? Intervention – what? Comparison – compared with what? Evaluation – with what result? |
PerSPecTIF An extended question framework that aims to describe both wider context and immediate setting that is particularly suited to qualitative evidence synthesis and complex intervention reviews. (Booth et al, 2019) |
Perspective Setting Phenomenon of interest/ Problem Environment Comparison (optional) Time/ Timing Findings |
References:
Booth, A. (2006), "Clear and present questions: formulating questions for evidence based practice", Library Hi Tech, Vol. 24 No. 3, pp. 355-368. https://doi.org/10.1108/07378830610692127
Booth A, Noyes J, Flemming K, et al Formulating questions to explore complex interventions within qualitative evidence synthesis BMJ Global Health 2019;4:e001107.
Cooke A, Smith D, Booth A. Beyond PICO: the SPIDER tool for qualitative evidence synthesis. Qual Health Res. 2012 Oct;22(10):1435-43. doi: 10.1177/1049732312452938. Epub 2012 Jul 24. PMID: 22829486.
Central issues in clinical work, where clinical questions often arise |
1. Clinical findings : how to properly gather and interpret findings from the history and physical examination |
2. Etiology/risk : how to identify causes or risk factors for disease (including iatrogenic harms). |
3. Clinical manifestations of disease : knowing how often and when a disease causes its clinical manifestations and how to use this knowledge in classifying our patients' illnesses. |
4. Differential diagnosis : when considering the possible causes of our patient's clinical problems, how to select those that are likely, serious, and responsive to treatment. |
5. Diagnostic tests : how to select and interpret diagnostic tests, to confirm or exclude a diagnosis, based on considering their precision, accuracy, acceptability, safety, expense, and so on. |
6. Prognosis : how to estimate our patient's likely clinical course over time and anticipate likely complications of the disorder. |
7. Therapy : how to select treatments to offer our patients that do more good than harm and that are worth the efforts and costs of using them. |
8. Prevention : how to reduce the chance of disease by identifying and modifying risk factors and how to diagnose disease early by screening. |
9. Experience and meaning (Qualitative): how to empathize with our patients' situations, appreciate the meaning they find in the experience, and understand how this meaning influences their healing. |
10. Improvement : how to keep up to date, improve our clinical and other skills, and run a better, more efficient clinical care system. |
From: Strauss, SE. Evidence-based medicine: how to practice and teach EBM.