Literature DB >> 33241613

Professional judgement in clinical practice (part 2): knowledge into practice.

Robert Mugerauer1.   

Abstract

RATIONALE, AIMS, AND
OBJECTIVES: Though strong evidence-based medicine is assertive in its claims, an insufficient theoretical basis and patchwork of arguments provide a good case that rather than introducing a new paradigm, EBM is resisting a shift to actually revolutionary complexity theory and other emergent approaches. This refusal to pass beyond discredited positivism is manifest in strong EBM's unsuccessful attempts to continually modify its already inadequate previous modifications, as did the defenders of the Ptolemaic astronomical model who increased the number of circular epicycles until the entire epicycle-deferent system proved untenable.
METHODS: Narrative Review.
RESULTS: The analysis in Part 1 of this three part series showed epistemological confusion as strong EBM plays the discredited positivistic tradition out to the end, thus repeating in a medical sphere and vocabulary the major assumptions and inadequacies that have appeared in the trajectory of modern science. Paper 2 in this series examines application, attending to strong EBM's claim of direct transferability of EBM research findings to clinical settings and its assertion of epistemological normativity. EBM's contention that it provides the "only valid" approach to knowledge and action is questioned by analyzing the troubled story of proposed hierarchies of the quality of research findings (especially of RCTs, with other factors marginalized), which falsely identifies evaluating findings with operationally utilizing them in clinical recommendations and decision-making. Further, its claim of carrying over its normative guidelines to cover the ethical responsibilities of researchers and clinicians is questioned.
© 2020 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  application to clinical recommendations; evidence-based medicine; judgement; quality of evidence

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 33241613     DOI: 10.1111/jep.13514

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Eval Clin Pract        ISSN: 1356-1294            Impact factor:   2.431


  1 in total

1.  Humans, machines and decisions: Clinical reasoning in the age of artificial intelligence, evidence-based medicine and Covid-19.

Authors:  Michael Loughlin; Samantha Marie Copeland
Journal:  J Eval Clin Pract       Date:  2021-04-23       Impact factor: 2.431

  1 in total

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