scientific-skills/clinical-reports/references/case_report_guidelines.md
The CARE guidelines provide a framework for transparent and complete reporting of clinical cases. The CARE checklist ensures that case reports contain all necessary information for readers to assess the validity and applicability of the findings.
1. Title
2. Keywords
ability
3a. Introduction
3b. Patient's main concerns and important clinical findings
3c. Main diagnoses, therapeutics interventions, and outcomes
3d. Conclusion
Abstract Length: Typically 150-250 words, structured or unstructured depending on journal
4. Background
5. Why is this case novel?
6. Patient demographics and other information
7. Main symptoms of patient
8. Medical, family, and psychosocial history
9. Relevant past interventions and outcomes
10. Describe the relevant physical examination findings
11. Describe important dates and times in this case
Timeline Format Options:
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| Day 0 | Onset of chest pain and dyspnea |
| Day 0, 2 hours | Presented to emergency department |
| Day 0, 4 hours | CT angiography performed, diagnosed with aortic dissection |
| Day 0, 6 hours | Emergency surgery performed |
| Day 7 | Discharged home in stable condition |
| Month 3 | Follow-up imaging shows complete healing |
12a. Diagnostic methods
12b. Diagnostic challenges
12c. Diagnostic reasoning
12d. Prognostic characteristics
12e. Strengths and limitations of diagnostic approaches
13a. Types of interventions
Example:
13b. Administration of interventions
13c. Changes to interventions
13d. Strengths and limitations
14a. Clinician and patient-assessed outcomes
14b. Important follow-up diagnostic and other test results
15a. Strengths and limitations
15b. Relevant medical literature
15c. Rationale for conclusions
15d. Main takeaways
15e. Future research or clinical care
16. Patient's perspective or experience
Example: "The patient stated: 'I thought I was having a heart attack, but the pain was different than I expected. I'm grateful the doctors figured out what was wrong so quickly.'"
This section is optional but encouraged as it provides valuable patient-centered information.
17. Informed consent statement
Examples:
Complete list of protected health information (PHI) that must be removed for Safe Harbor de-identification:
Age Reporting:
Date Reporting:
Location:
Rare Conditions:
Images:
Pathology and Imaging:
Use clear, specific language:
Avoid ambiguous terms:
Use active voice when appropriate:
Many journals require a "Learning Points" or "Key Messages" section with 3-5 bulleted takeaways.
Characteristics of good learning points:
Example:
Databases to search:
Search terms:
When citing literature:
Required elements:
Timing:
Special situations:
ICMJE criteria for authorship (all must be met):
Common authorship roles in case reports:
Common reviewer requests:
Response to reviewers:
Focus on diagnostic reasoning process, differential diagnosis, and key diagnostic clues.
Emphasize rarity, epidemiology, and contribution to medical knowledge about the condition.
Include drug details (dose, duration), timeline, causality assessment (Naranjo scale), and outcome after discontinuation.
Describe novel treatment approach, rationale, outcome, and comparison to standard treatment.
Describe unexpected response to treatment or unusual disease course.
This reference provides comprehensive guidance for writing clinical case reports following CARE guidelines. Refer to this document when preparing case reports for journal submission, and use the CARE checklist to ensure completeness before submission.