A well-structured question can help you identify which databases to search, structure your search, and select the most reliable levels of evidence to answer your question.
Types of questions
Determining your question type will guide how you:
a) interpret and structure your question using a mnemonic
b) identify which level of evidence or study design(s) are most appropriate.
There are 4 common question types used in medicine and health (which may not be relevant to other fields). These are also referred to as clinical questions.
They are:
- Therapy: the most beneficial treatment or prevention for a condition (drug therapy, surgery, physical therapy, etc.).
- Aetiology: the relationship between an exposure or causal factor and a patient developing a condition.
- Diagnosis: the validity and reliability of a diagnostic test or screening method.
- Prognosis: the likely disease progression for patients with or without treatment.
Mnemonic tools
Mnemonic tools can help you structure your question in a meaningful way.
This mnemonic guide outlines a range of mnemonics designed for different question types and purposes. It provides frameworks, along with example questions.
PICO
PICO (Population, Intervention, Comparator, Outcome) is a common mnemonic used in health and medicine that can also be applied to other disciplines.
This video explains how to use PICO to break down a research question.