Transcript Slide 1

Title
Authors
Associated institutions
Research Question
Identify the specific aims for your study.
Significance
Using the literature, establish any previous
work related to your research question. This
section should describe the gaping hole in the
literature, and how your specific aims will
attempt to address the gaping hole.
Design
What research design was used to address
your specific aims?
Examples include:
Case series, case-control, retrospective cohort,
cross-sectional, prospective cohort,
randomized controlled trial
HEY!!
- Not only is a retrospective chart
review not a study design, it’s redundantly
redundant. Get your terms straight, buckaroo!
It’s probably really a case series or
retrospective cohort study, but if in doubt,
please check with your co-authors, or contact
the GRMEP Research Department.
POSTER TEMPLATES BY:
www.POSTERPRESENTATIONS.com
Subjects
This is where you’d plop your patient
information but, truth be told, not all studies
involve patients, so adjust your heading
accordingly. For example, you could have
done an animal study, worked with cells, or
even run a meta-analysis.
Assuming this is a clinical study, however,
you need to provide information to your reader
concerning your subjects. You should describe
from where you obtained your subjects, over
what time period, and using which specific
inclusion and exclusion criteria. If this was a
prospective study, you will need to state
whether informed consent was obtained.
Procedures/Variables/Definitions
This section basically describes your
experimental treatments/interventions (if any),
your methods of obtaining your data, and a
description of your variables. So, if you had a
treatment to describe how you removed a
patient’s spleen using two magnets and a
bungee cord, that would go in here. Likewise,
you would provide information about a chart
review in this section as well. Provide
information about your primary outcome
variable, as well as all secondary outcome
variables. At times, it will be necessary to
define these variables, so please be precise.
Don’t Be Constrained by These Headings
Every case is different, so don’t feel like you
have to mash your round pegs to fit into the
template’s square holes. Add sections and
headings as are dictated by your study.
Charts/Graphs/Pictures
Lights! Camera! Graphs! Photos!
Lurid Data! Yow!
You get the idea. Here is where you put your
eyeball grabbing data, amazing graphs, and
stupendous radiology and photos. Just don’t
get all carried away with the three-D stuff and
the retina searing color combinations.
Provide your information in a clear,
informative, and yes, entertaining fashion.
Remember to number all Tables and Figures,
so that you can easily refer to them in the
Results section.
Analyses
Use this section to provide a brief description
of the statistical tests used, your sample size
justification (if pertinent to your study), and
your criterion for significance (e.g., P < 0.05).
Discussion (continued)
At times, you will need to continue a section
from the bottom of one column to the top of
the next. When you do this, be sure to rename
the heading, with the word “continued” in
parentheses, so that the reader can more
easily follow the flow of the poster.
Results
Here’s where you provide some detail to all of
the cool tables and figures that you have
provided. Make sure that the reader is very
aware of what you consider to be the major
findings from your study. This is also a place
to remark upon some of the minor findings
that did not make their way into any of your
tables and figures.
Conclusions
The big finish, where you get to blow your
audience away with your final, pithy comment.
This should be brief, three sentences tops. If
you’re at a loss for words, you can either do a
combined Discussion/Conclusions section, or
just do a conclusions section that reiterates the
importance of your study.
HEY!! - Don’t just regurgitate the same
information that is already present in your
tables and figures. Pick out specific pieces of
information upon which you would like your
reader to focus.
Discussion
The discussion section is used to summarize
the main findings from your study, and to
interpret your results relative to current
findings in the literature.
References
While it is a nice thing to include references,
if you’re crunched for space, these are the
first things to go. If the choice is between
including a really good looking graph or the
references, ditch the references and show
the graph.