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  1. Jun 6, 2015 · Sackett, a pioneer in clinical epidemiology, died at age 80 on May 13. His influence on the practice of medicine around the world was profound. He changed the way people thought about clinical trials, systematic reviews, medical education, research methods to evaluate new treatments, mentoring clinician-scientists and more.

    • Roger Collier
    • 10.1503/cmaj.109-5072
    • 2015
    • CMAJ. 2015 Jun 16; 187(9): 640-641.
  2. David Lawrence Sackett OC FRSC (November 17, 1934 – May 13, 2015) was an American-Canadian physician and a pioneer in evidence-based medicine. [1] [2] He is known as one of the fathers of Evidence-Based Medicine. He founded the first department of clinical epidemiology in Canada at McMaster University, and the Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based ...

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  4. Jul 10, 2015 · On May 13, 2015, David Sackett, the physician who is considered the father of EBM, passed away. In this issue's EBM Hub, we will tell you a few things about this extraordinary man and his accomplishments. He was American by birth but Canadian by choice. He was born in Chicago in 1934 and obtained his medical degree at the University of Illinois.

    • Achilleas Thoma, Felmont F. Eaves
    • 2015
  5. May 15, 2015 · And few people did more to advance that cause than David Sackett. Sackett, who died on Wednesday at the age of 80, was widely known as the father of the "evidence-based medicine" movement ...

    • Julia Belluz
  6. Aug 9, 2022 · David McCullough, who was raised in Pittsburgh, studied English literature at Yale and became America's unofficial historian emeritus, also won praise for his voiceover work in an acclaimed ...

    • Lee Habeeb
  7. Dec 8, 2016 · The American Dream, Quantified at Last. The phrase “American dream” was invented during the Great Depression. It comes from a popular 1931 book by the historian James Truslow Adams, who ...

  8. David L. Sackett: Interview in 2014-2015. placebo or 1 of several of that decade’s lipid-lowering agents, they were hard-pressed to find a drug that worked. For example, the 5-year mortality for participants randomized to clofibrate (20%) was no better than for those randomized to placebo (21%)93.

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