Literature DB >> 21631765

Deconstructing the evidence-based discourse in health sciences: truth, power and fascism.

Dave Holmes1, Stuart J Murray, Amélie Perron, Geneviève Rail.   

Abstract

Background  Drawing on the work of the late French philosophers Deleuze and Guattari, the objective of this paper is to demonstrate that the evidence-based movement in the health sciences is outrageously exclusionary and dangerously normative with regards to scientific knowledge. As such, we assert that the evidence-based movement in health sciences constitutes a good example of microfascism at play in the contemporary scientific arena. Objective  The philosophical work of Deleuze and Guattari proves to be useful in showing how health sciences are colonised (territorialised) by an all-encompassing scientific research paradigm - that of post-positivism - but also and foremost in showing the process by which a dominant ideology comes to exclude alternative forms of knowledge, therefore acting as a fascist structure. Conclusion  The Cochrane Group, among others, has created a hierarchy that has been endorsed by many academic institutions, and that serves to (re)produce the exclusion of certain forms of research. Because 'regimes of truth' such as the evidence-based movement currently enjoy a privileged status, scholars have not only a scientific duty, but also an ethical obligation to deconstruct these regimes of power.

Year:  2006        PMID: 21631765     DOI: 10.1111/j.1479-6988.2006.00041.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Evid Based Healthc        ISSN: 1744-1595


  23 in total

1.  Scientism and Pseudoscience: A Philosophical Commentary.

Authors:  Massimo Pigliucci
Journal:  J Bioeth Inq       Date:  2015-11-28       Impact factor: 1.352

2.  Global health in conflict. Understanding opposition to vitamin A supplementation in India.

Authors:  Sarah K Wallace
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2012-05-17       Impact factor: 9.308

3.  Equity-focused knowledge translation: a framework for "reasonable action" on health inequities.

Authors:  J R Masuda; T Zupancic; E Crighton; N Muhajarine; E Phipps
Journal:  Int J Public Health       Date:  2013-10-24       Impact factor: 3.380

4.  Is using Nazi research to condemn homeopathy ethical or scientific?

Authors:  Lionel R Milgrom; Suse Moebius
Journal:  Br J Clin Pharmacol       Date:  2008-05-06       Impact factor: 4.335

5.  From healing to witchcraft: on ritual speech and roboticization in the hospital.

Authors:  Adrienne Pine
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2011-06

6.  "I Got to Know Them in a New Way": Rela(y/t)ing Rhizomes and Community-Based Knowledge (Brokers') Transformation of Western and Indigenous Knowledge.

Authors:  Barbara Fornssler; Holly A McKenzie; Colleen Anne Dell; Larry Laliberte; Carol Hopkins
Journal:  Cult Stud Crit Methodol       Date:  2014-04-01

7.  Preparing Graduates for Interprofessional Practice in South Africa: The Dissonance Between Learning and Practice.

Authors:  Jana Müller; Ian Couper
Journal:  Front Public Health       Date:  2021-02-12

8.  Patients at the centre: methodological considerations for evaluating evidence from health interventions involving patients use of web-based information systems.

Authors:  Elizabeth Cummings; Paul Turner
Journal:  Open Med Inform J       Date:  2010-09-15

9.  Mapping new theoretical and methodological terrain for knowledge translation: contributions from critical realism and the arts.

Authors:  Pia C Kontos; Blake D Poland
Journal:  Implement Sci       Date:  2009-01-05       Impact factor: 7.327

10.  Epistemologies of evidence-based medicine: a plea for corpus-based conceptual research in the medical humanities.

Authors:  Jan Buts; Mona Baker; Saturnino Luz; Eivind Engebretsen
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2021-05-31
View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.