| Literature DB >> 12740025 |
C Shawn Tracy1, Guilherme Coelho Dantas, Ross E G Upshur.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The objectives of this study were: a) to examine physician attitudes to and experience of the practice of evidence-based medicine (EBM) in primary care; b) to investigate the influence of patient preferences on clinical decision-making; and c) to explore the role of intuition in family practice.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2003 PMID: 12740025 PMCID: PMC165430 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2296-4-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Demographic profile of participants
| FP01 | 25–39 | M | 4 | Locums | Rural | West | N/A | Yes |
| FP02 | 40–54 | M | 17 | Group | Urban | East | Yes | Yes |
| FP03 | 55 + | F | 30 | Solo | Urban | West | No | Yes |
| FP04 | 40–54 | F | 18 | Group | Rural | West | Yes | Yes |
| FP05 | 40–54 | F | 23 | Group | Rural | East | Yes | Yes |
| FP06 | 55 + | M | 35 | Group | Urban | East | No | No |
| FP07 | 40–54 | F | 7 | Group | Rural | West | No | Yes |
| FP08 | 40–54 | M | 12 | Solo | Urban | West | Yes | Yes |
| FP09 | 25–39 | F | 4 | Group | Urban | East | Yes | Yes |
| FP10 | 55 + | F | 32 | Group | Urban | East | Yes | Yes |
| FP11 | 25–39 | F | 2 | Locums | Urban | East | N/A | No |
| FP12 | 25–39 | M | 2 | Group | Urban | East | Yes | Yes |
| FP13 | 40–54 | M | 16 | Group | Rural | East | Yes | Yes |
| FP14 | 55 + | M | 28 | Solo | Urban | West | Yes | Yes |
| FP15 | 40–54 | F | 14 | Group | Urban | West | Yes | No |
Quotations: Benefits and barriers
| "Throughout my residency, EBM was certainly spoken of a great deal ... and I was quite an advocate, but it has been tough to put it into practice in the real world. So maybe it was a little over-touted or maybe it's just growing pains, I'm not sure which, but it's still early days. I think that it's still too early to write it off; I still have hopes for it myself. I think it's philosophically the way to go, but the tools for putting it into practice have yet to be adequately developed." |
| "I don't think you sell out all your other methods for evidence-based medicine. You can't just practice exclusively evidence-based medicine, or else you'll miss out on some things. Having said that, however, I do support more use of it, especially for the initial management of common problems... It's very useful to have an evidence-based structure because you often have undifferentiated presentation at the outset. As you follow the course of an illness, then you have more individual solutions." |
| "It's a buzzword. Maybe they used a different word before. We always had to have evidence that things work before you put them in practice, right? You never did something unless you had evidence. In the '70s, I always looked at what evidence there was from clinical trials and clinical practice guidelines before I implemented." |
| "For family medicine, I think that we now have something to base our approaches on rather than just sort of general nice feelings. We have a more organized way, particularly from a teaching point of view, of how to approach problems.... I think [EBM] is probably the only way to go now, given that we have access to such a mountain of information." |
| "Evidence-based medicine seems to be a word that has become very fashionable, and in many ways, I wonder how it is different than the medicine that I learned 30 years ago. To me, it means that there is evidence to show that something is effective and I thought that that's what we did all along... I haven't seen anything in it that convinces me that it's a huge paradigm shift." |
| "I think it's really important. I try to be evidence-based as much as I can ... and I try to stay up to date. I try to explain things to patients, because they don't always understand, particularly if I'm doing something that they don't expect. Then I'll try to explain to them that there's evidence for doing or not doing something." |
| "I think it's good, because it actually protects us. If we're ever accused or criticized for the practice that we're performing and we can go back to the studies and say, 'Here's the evidence that suggests this is the best way to treat it.' That protects you from a medical/legal point of view and it also allows you to reassure the patient that the practice you're pursuing is based on evidence that's been gleaned by good quality studies." |
| "I think it [EBM] needs distillation. It's difficult to apply in family practice because there are a gazillion guidelines out there, all purporting to be based on the evidence." |
| "I think EBM is predicated upon there being well-supported and financed independent reviewers who are doing the meta-analyses and the broader views which have become the key to evidence-based medicine and then selecting which ones are quality enough to include. It's just not practical for the family practitioner to be able to do that, even if you do have the tools, the time just isn't going to be there." |
| "One problem is when we take on some EBM evidence, our patients may not fit into the sample that was studied. Part of the challenge I have is trying to remember who was in the studies and who it applies to. You know, I'm not going to go look up every single study every time I want to apply some of the literature to my patients. I think that's definitely a factor." |
| "I think for the average practitioner, EBM has limited applicability or practicality in its current format. It has to be changed if it's going to be practical for use by most family doctors." |
| "I think that you still have to consider expert opinion, because you have to rely on the experts to evaluate what the literature shows, to give you some kind of impression overall, like how applicable it is to other people. I don't think that the individual standardly trained physician that's working in the community has the time or training or interest to decide what's good evidence and what isn't. So I think you still need the experts." |
| "A lot of times the findings of these large clinical trials are indiscriminately applied to a population that it doesn't apply to. I'm very critical of that. I'm sort of on hyper-alert for not doing that.... I wouldn't want to be treated exactly the same way as 10 million other people simply because for 90 percent of people this works. What if I'm one of the other 10 percent?" |
| "It's difficult to adopt evidence-based medicine in primary care when every patient needs to have every investigation that you think is appropriate. So, I'm always making judgments and yet trying to keep in mind the fact that there are some things I shouldn't do because the evidence isn't there for it." |
| "It's very difficult right now because the resources are poor and the funding for family physicians is targetted towards solving problems rather than practicing evidence-based medicine. We are paid to put out fires, if I might say so. We don't get enough time to practice evidence-based medicine in terms of prevention." |
| "I do not offer colon cancer screening to my patients, for instance. The evidence is there that it helps, but I don't have the time to go through it and we don't have the colonoscopy backup – it just isn't available here." |
Quotations: Constraints on practice
| "I fear that what's happening with evidence-based medicine is that it's becoming a rigid system and the push behind evidence-based medicine in certain quarters, not all, has to do with money and not with care... There is less of an understanding on the part of management of the actual work circumstances for those of us on the care end that are trying to implement it." |
| "I think my practice is more evidence-based than it was because the information is more widely available. I guess the difficulty is that when I'm seeing patients, I don't want to be totally constrained by this idea that the only thing you can do in any one encounter is what's defined by a guideline, and if it's not defined by a guideline, then you can't do it." |
| "I think evidence-based medicine is being over-emphasized. We're losing the art of medicine.... We're becoming too much like paper pushers and computer geeks instead of recognizing the humanity, especially with family physicians who see the people through everything." |
| "I think the fear that I have about evidence-based medicine is that it's asking us not to think any more. If somebody else is going to go, "Okay, we've looked at the evidence and this is what you do," then I'm becoming more of a technician than a practitioner. I do think that there's still a place for us to be critical of evidence." |
| "The guidelines will only take you so far and they're a useful stepping off point, but each individual case has so many factors at play beyond what the guidelines cover and that's where the art and the pleasure of medicine comes in using your clinical judgement to realize that what the protocol says doesn't apply to that person or it applies in a different way. That takes a good understanding of what the meaning is behind the protocol so I don't think you're ever just a technician." |
| "The way it's presented is: 'This is what you do. If this is here, you do that.' That's not the way we can practice medicine and they have to realize that." |
| "I have to say that, probably because I practiced before it came along, I know that most of the things that I do are not evidence-based... Personal experience means a lot and it's hard to get away from that when you're faced with an evidence-based pronouncement that says that a certain thing that you do for somebody isn't useful, even though you've used it in the past and found something that you wouldn't have found if you hadn't done it." |
| "Another frustration would be that when a patient doesn't respond well to a certain therapy, then we need to use other therapies, but there may or may not be evidence for that. Then sometimes we're checked or doubted for our competency if we do things not quite in the norm." |
| "We get mail-outs of clinical practice guidelines which are evidence-based – they're really looked at as recommendations for treatment. None of us feel like we have to do things this way, but we also know that we have information on a simple sheet to back up where the evidence is." |
Quotations: Trust and credibility
| "This is where I have a real problem. The evidence base is driven by profit. More and more, it's driven by profit. Nobody's doing the studies with medications that already exist but are off patent. Nobody's doing the studies with simple interventions like making sure that single moms have relief. So if I just go by what there's evidence for, I end up participating in this industrial complex." |
| "Something I'm intensely aware of at all times is the degree to which the information source is promoting a drug company agenda. Certainly with all the freebie journals that we get I look at them with an extremely skeptical eye to the point of not even looking at them for the most part, but they do have the occasional useful bit so I tend to filter very, very heavily." |
| "The absolute worst are new drug trials... It's very typical that these are funded by drug companies. They're low quality, not taking into account side effects of the drugs, there's not a long enough follow-up so that you could properly judge whether the drug is safe or not, and they use ways of assessing effectiveness that favour the drug." |
| "It would be nice if there was more pure research done through academic agencies who are independent of drug companies. Then you wouldn't have to worry about removing that one bias – it just wouldn't be there to begin with... In the real world, drug companies are going to be funding a lot of the research, so you've got to be aware of that all the time as a clinician down at my end, far removed from the research." |
| "I think it can limit advancement because a lot of the 'evidence-based medicine' is conducted by drug companies, and I have a big issue about that.... I think it's unfortunate that drug companies have so much influence on the things that are studied. For instance, I think natural therapies and complementary therapies is one area that really needs to be researched, but it probably won't because they can't get patents on it." |
| "I think EBM is predicated upon there being well-supported and financed independent reviewers who are doing the meta-analyses and the broader views which have become the key to evidence-based medicine." |
| "I don't want to transfer authority from the individual physician to the pharmaceutical companies or to the vested interests and I think that's what we're in danger of doing. The evidence isn't clean, so much so now that respected journals are struggling not to accept tainted evidence and still keep their heads above water. There are terrible influences on them." |
| "In my view, not all publications are equal in that those published by drug companies and those in more marginal journals are frequently more marketing than they are true science. Even with those of quite high quality, they often go through huge amounts of selection with inclusion/exclusion criteria such that the results are probably most applicable to only a small portion of a family doctor's population, but that is not stressed enough in the papers. The results and the discussion tend to focus mostly on the successful nature of the medication without incorporating enough of the appropriate cautions and limitations of where this information should be applied." |
| "The difficult problem with evidence-based medicine is that in order to produce a high quality trial you need to have a certain amount of funding and there are probably ways that things can be manipulated so that you can get that trial off the ground and published with a particular result.... Then there are the pharmaceutical companies, which choose not to publish results of trials they've conducted that don't show a difference. They just won't get seen. So you can't put all your eggs in the basket of evidence-based medicine." |
Quotations: Conflicts and decision-making
| "Oh, we have examples of that daily. For instance, the patient thinks he must have a PSA. The evidence is not clear that that's going to save his life. In fact, it may render him incontinent and impotent for something that may not have bothered him at all." |
| "There's tons of examples [of conflicts] at the moment. What about mammography and breast self-exam? Patients are as confused as family doctors are. I think it shows that science can only take us part of the way." |
| "With evidence-based medicine, you're looking at the methodology. You're seeing how closely a patient fits with the particular study and many times your specific situation does not fit exactly. Then you're using clinical insights, you're using patient preferences, you're using your own experience, you're using the practice patterns of your community... Certainly, I think it behooves one to be aware of what the evidence is, but that doesn't mean that even though there's good evidence available that that's going to be the best answer in your specific situation." |
| "It's pretty common that it happens [conflicting evidence] and it's a very difficult challenge. For the most part, the patients are usually informed of a conflict and they often ask what my opinion is, which I think is very interesting because EBM is telling us not to have opinions about it, but yet the patients are actually wanting our opinions." |
| "When you've worked the number of years I have, you go with something you're familiar with. If there's two medications and you're not sure, you tend to stick with what you are familiar with, whether there's good evidence or not, I'm afraid. I go with what I know and what I've practiced – you might call it intuition." |
| "In those cases [conflicting evidence], it's hard to know what to believe sometimes, but you just evaluate the evidence that's there and wait for better evidence.... I often ask for advice, usually from family physicians. Then also, although I don't have a lot of experience, you're also looking at your own experience, which I know is not great evidence [laughs], it's anecdotal evidence, but it sometimes does play a part." |
| "When you've got conflicting results from evidence-based medicine – you've got evidence saying one thing and evidence saying the exact opposite thing – you're going to have to use other bits of information or strategies to try to decide which way you're going to go." |
| "I can see lots of conflict between the goals of a study and the goals in real life." |
Quotations: Patient factors
| "Sometimes it's hard to sell it [the evidence] to certain patients. They have a certain expectation and one of the principles of family medicine is to be patient-centred. You have to listen to what they have to say and then meet in the middle... Often it's a struggle and I find that I'm delaying treatment because the patient is not willing to accept the evidence" |
| "I try to explain the evidence to them as best I understand it, and then we end up doing what the patient wants to do most of the time." |
| "It [EBM] has to be another layer of thinking, I suppose, but when it comes to whether or not it's in the patient's best interest to do it, the evidence-based stuff often goes out the window.... I think it's useful to have it as a guideline, but it's difficult sometimes when you think you're in the hot seat trying to deal with a patient's needs. You don't want to let your patient down... and sometimes that's a difficult task to accomplish, to have the patient go away feeling that their concerns have been addressed." |
| "Sometimes, in order to keep the peace, you may deviate from the evidence to appease the patient. You have to do that sometimes because you're living in the real world, you're interacting with people. The trick is to know how far you can deviate." |
| "EBM is helpful to give physicians a reference on how to manage cases, but it depends on the personality of the patient. When I know the patient, they're usually willing to accept it [the evidence]. It's important to earn the trust of the patient first." |
| "Evidence-based medicine has probably been over-focused on the scientific data aspect and less about how to incorporate that in the context of the patient's values and wishes and the particular clinical circumstances of a given individual patient." |
| "Patients are now accessing the Internet and coming in with decisions about what's wrong with them. With a certain set of symptoms, one would follow a certain protocol for testing, but sometimes now patients have ingrained in themselves the idea that they have to have this [particular treatment], and there's no amount of discussion that will budge the feeling that that's what they've got. So, in that circumstance, I will sometimes order the test they're asking for, even though they don't fit the protocol, because that's the only way of showing to them that that firmly held belief that this is what's wrong with them isn't what's wrong with them." |
| "What I explain to my patients is that my job is to give them advice, and my advice is based on the best evidence and skill that I have, and then once they listen to my advice, they have to make up their own mind and take my advice and do whatever they want with it. If they insist on having something more aggressive done that I don't agree with, then I'll often set up for them to get a second opinion." |
| "I often negotiate with the patient. If there's some kind of end-point we're looking at, depending on what they're wanting to do, and if it seems reasonable and non-harmful, I'll often go along with something I normally wouldn't, for a while anyway... I think it really depends on the situation. I think the bottom line is looking at what's more harmful to the patient. I really try to talk with the patient about it beforehand That's where the art comes in. If the patient is very articulate and has read up on different information, then I'll go along with it to a point, but I won't go against my own ethics or the College ethics." |
| "The evidence that new drug XYZ is going to reduce the incidence of death by one percent really doesn't matter if my patient can't afford the basic... If it's something like a minor improvement for a great deal of money, I won't even tell the patient. What's the point? I know they can't afford it." |
| "What is it that you want to achieve? Are you looking at quantity of life or quality of life? And how do people value of quality of life? What's important to them? Those are things that need to be factored in. If you specifically want to look at avoiding heart attacks, maybe you can avoid somebody from having an M.I. and get them to live to 110, but if what they have to do makes them miserable for the next 30 years, you've achieved the stated outcome, but that's not really in synchrony with what the patient desires. Then there's the whole issue of the patient, the family, society – it gets very complex." |
| "I listen to my patients and I tend to not push them too much, because they're just going to walk out of there and not be compliant. So I think I have to be realistic as to what I expect that they're going to follow when they leave the office. I guess I try to put it in some context that is going to be meaningful to them in that situation, and paint a picture of both sides of what would happen if they followed the evidence and what would happen if they didn't. I try to sometimes let the patient make the decision of which way they'd like to go – obviously with what I feel would be the most appropriate treatment, but in the end it has to be their decision." |
| "Sometimes you actually get into arguments with patients, and that's stressful. Most of the time I don't give in to the patient. I try to explain it and either they come on side and sort of agree with me or they totally disagree and they probably go and seek care elsewhere, which happens sometimes with the bigger conflicts." |
Quotations: Role of intuition
| "Intuition is the sixth sense, that's what I call it. It's just one of those things that you do without any evidence, and it's probably a good thing, too. You've got to use your common sense and intuition and gut feelings... If you get hung up just on the evidence, you're going to miss some things, and you're going to mistreat somebody and create unnecessary anxiety." |
| "Intuition plays a huge part in our practice – that non-scientific art of medicine, which I do think is extremely valuable.... We should get the best possible scientific information that we can, but we should also recognize that there are things that we can't understand and we can't explain. I think we would lose a lot if we don't allow our intuition to guide us. Either without the other as a little bit of a check can be disastrous. I think with a good blend of the two, people can become really excellent clinicians." |
| "I think you still have to rely on intuition and that you have to sort of break the rules now and again, depending on the situation. So I do feel strongly that you can't do only EBM.... You still need to have a sense of where the patient's at. You take EBM into consideration, but in the end you make your own clinical judgment, which is what I actually believe EBM is designed to do." |
| "I really think that intuition has to have its own proper place in the management of patients. It should not be on a higher pedestal than evidence-based medicine, but it needs to be legitimized and put on an equal pedestal, not on a lower pedestal or discarded altogether because evidence-based medicine says that you must do things in a certain fashion." |
| "I see it as practicing EBM with the art of medicine behind you. I think that those of us that do it this way still do a lot more evidence-based medicine than people that don't even consider the evidence at all." |
| "I go with both in my practice. I know what the evidence is, but I still consider my intuition." |
| "I think a lot of [family practice] is gut feeling based on your experiences with similar patients. So many times you see a patient and you don't really know what's making you feel a certain way, but you get a gestalt about a certain thing. I think when you follow your gut, you're more likely to be successful, but you need the background of understanding what you're doing. I think evidence-based medicine is a background for allowing your intuition to come to the forefront and to help you make a decision. I look at it as two different things. I think the evidence is there, and I think it's important, I think it has to guide us, but I don't think it has to absolutely determine what we do." |
| "Myself, I also believe that there is still a place for the art of medicine, and it doesn't matter how much evidence you have about something, there are some times when one would do something differently even knowing what the evidence is." |