The Cochrane Skin Group is part of a larger international endeavour, the Cochrane Collaboration, with the aim of preparing, maintaining and promoting the accessibility of systematic reviews of the effects of health care interventions. The Collaboration is organised into different subject areas and fields, and is supported by national centres. Systematic reviews are of interest to health care providers, consumers, researchers, and other groups.
The Cochrane Skin Group is a network of people from all over the world committed to producing and updating reviews of trials relating to skin conditions. The process begins with individuals getting together with an important clinical question. They then search for all the relevant published and unpublished trial information, critically appraise it, and summarise that information in such a way that can be understood by health care practitioners, consumers and managers. The aim of the Cochrane Skin Group is simply to produce the best possible evidence on the effectiveness of health care interventions for people with skin problems.
The scope of the Skin Group is wide, and includes any skin problem that leads an individual to seek help from a health care provider. The Group also considers evidence about skin treatments that are sold over-the-counter or are widely available.
................................................................................................................................
Cochrane Skin Group, Centre of Evidence Based Dermatology, Room A103, King's Meadow Campus, University of Nottingham, United Kingdom. NG7 2NR
This web site is maintained by Laura Prescott
The Cochrane Library
Issue 4, 2009
New reviews
*Oral potassium iodide for the treatment of sporotrichosis
*Surgical excision margins for primary cutaneous melanoma
New Protocols
*Interventions for cutaneous lichen planus
*Interventions for erosive lichen planus affecting mucosal sites
*Interventions for seborrhoeic dermatitis
*Systemic retinoids for ichthyosis in children
New updates
*Drugs for discoid lupus erythematosus