Literature DB >> 33314965

The terminology conflict on efficacy and effectiveness in healthcare.

Franz Porzsolt1, Felicitas Wiedemann1,2,3, Meret Phlippen1,2,4, Christel Weiss1,5, Manfred Weiss1,6, Karen Schmaling7, Robert M Kaplan8.   

Abstract

Designers and architects created the rule 'form follows function (FFF)' for their own profession. Our paper demonstrates that this FFF rule applies equally well to the designers of clinical studies. Four examples present are as follows: disregarding this FFF rule causes an inconsistent terminology to differentiate between efficacy and effectiveness, inconsistent differentiation of efficacy and effectiveness interferes with the consistent interpretation of the results of clinical studies, inconsistent interpretation of clinical studies results in an unexpectedly variance of recommendations in clinical guidelines and the fusion of the FFF designer rule and of the demands of Cochrane and Bradford Hill ('can it work?', 'does it work?' and 'is it worth it?') avoids the terminology problem and its misleading consequences. This strategy is presented.

Keywords:  comparative effectiveness research; evidence-based medicine; guideline development; health services research; nonrandomized trials; observational research; pragmatic clinical trials; real-world evidence; trial design

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 33314965     DOI: 10.2217/cer-2020-0149

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Comp Eff Res        ISSN: 2042-6305            Impact factor:   1.744


  1 in total

1.  Measuring Health-Related Quality of Life in Randomised Controlled Trials: Expected and Reported Results Do Not Match.

Authors:  Felicitas Wiedemann; Franz Porzsolt
Journal:  Pragmat Obs Res       Date:  2022-04-11
  1 in total

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