Scolaris Content Display Scolaris Content Display

Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews

Route of antibiotic prophylaxis for prevention of cerebrospinal fluid‐shunt infection

This is not the most recent version

Information

DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD012902Copy DOI
Database:
  1. Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews
Version published:
  1. 12 December 2017see what's new
Type:
  1. Intervention
Stage:
  1. Protocol
Cochrane Editorial Group:
  1. Cochrane Multiple Sclerosis and Rare Diseases of the CNS Group

Copyright:
  1. Copyright © 2017 The Cochrane Collaboration. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Article metrics

Altmetric:

Cited by:

Cited 0 times via Crossref Cited-by Linking

Collapse

Authors

  • Sebastian HHMJ Arts

    Correspondence to: Department of Neurosurgery, Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Center, Nijmegen, Netherlands

    [email protected]

  • Hieronymus Damianus Boogaarts

    Department of Neurosurgery, Radboud University Nijmegen, Nijmegen, Netherlands

  • Erik J van Lindert

    Neurosurgery, Radboud University Medical Center, Nijmegen, Netherlands

Contributions of authors

SA drafted the protocol. All authors participated in reviewing and editing the protocol.

Sources of support

Internal sources

  • Radboud University Nijmegen, Netherlands.

    • Librarian connected to the library of medical sciences at the Radboud University Medical Center has helped to set‐up a search strategy

External sources

  • No sources of support supplied

Declarations of interest

SA ‐ None

HB ‐ None

EvL ‐ None

Acknowledgements

None

Version history

Published

Title

Stage

Authors

Version

2019 Jun 04

Route of antibiotic prophylaxis for prevention of cerebrospinal fluid‐shunt infection

Review

Sebastian HHMJ Arts, Hieronymus Damianus Boogaarts, Erik J van Lindert

https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD012902.pub2

2017 Dec 12

Route of antibiotic prophylaxis for prevention of cerebrospinal fluid‐shunt infection

Protocol

Sebastian HHMJ Arts, Hieronymus Damianus Boogaarts, Erik J van Lindert

https://doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD012902

Keywords

MeSH

PICOs

Population
Intervention
Comparison
Outcome

The PICO model is widely used and taught in evidence-based health care as a strategy for formulating questions and search strategies and for characterizing clinical studies or meta-analyses. PICO stands for four different potential components of a clinical question: Patient, Population or Problem; Intervention; Comparison; Outcome.

See more on using PICO in the Cochrane Handbook.