Are therapeutic decisions supported by evidence from health care research?

被引:45
|
作者
Michaud, G [1 ]
McGowan, JL [1 ]
van der Jagt, R [1 ]
Wells, G [1 ]
Tugwell, P [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Ottawa, Ottawa Gen Hosp, Dept Internal Med, Ottawa, ON, Canada
关键词
D O I
10.1001/archinte.158.15.1665
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Background: One of the most common decisions physicians face is deciding which therapeutic intervention is the most appropriate for their patients. In recent years much emphasis has been placed on making clinical decisions that are based on evidence from the medical literature. Despite the emphasis on incorporation of evidence-based medicine into the undergraduate curriculum and postgraduate medical training programs, there has been controversy regarding the proportion of interventions that are supported by health care research. Objective: To investigate the proportion of major therapeutic interventions at our institution that are justified by published evidence. Methods: One hundred fifty charts from the internal medicine department were reviewed retrospectively. The main diagnosis, therapy provided, and patient profile were identified and a literature search using MEDLINE was performed. A standardized search strategy was developed with high sensitivity and specificity for identifying publication quality. The level of evidence to support each clinical decision was ranked according to a predetermined classification. In this system there were 6 distinct levels, which are explained in the study. Results: Of the decisions studied, 20.9% could be supported by placebo-controlled randomized trials and 43.9% by head-to-head trials. Half of these were shown to be significantly superior to the treatment against which it was being compared. For 10 of the 150 clinical decisions, evidence was found demonstrating alternative therapies as being more effective than that selected. Conclusions: Most primary therapeutic clinical decisions in 3 general medicine services are supported by evidence from randomized controlled trials. This should be reassuring to those who are concerned about the extent to which clinical medicine is based on empirical evidence. This finding has potential for quality assurance, as exemplified by the discovery that a literature search could have potentially improved these decisions in some cases.
引用
收藏
页码:1665 / 1668
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Health and Death Risk and Income Decisions: Evidence from Microfinance
    Jacobsen, Grant
    JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENT STUDIES, 2009, 45 (06): : 934 - 946
  • [22] THERAPEUTIC MOBILIZATION AS NURSING CARE: EVIDENCE FROM PRACTICE
    Abreu da Silva, Renata Flavia
    de Luca Nascimento, Maria Aparecida
    REVISTA DA ESCOLA DE ENFERMAGEM DA USP, 2012, 46 (02) : 413 - 419
  • [23] Operational research applied to decisions in home health care: A systematic literature review
    Grieco, Luca
    Utley, Martin
    Crowe, Sonya
    JOURNAL OF THE OPERATIONAL RESEARCH SOCIETY, 2021, 72 (09) : 1960 - 1991
  • [24] From Population Databases to research and informed health Decisions and Policy
    Machluf, Yossy
    Tal, Orna
    Navon, Amir
    Chaiter, Yoram
    FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH, 2017, 5
  • [25] Decisions on therapeutic intervention in neonatal intensive care
    Zetterström, R
    ACTA PAEDIATRICA, 2004, 93 (02) : 148 - 148
  • [26] Neuromonitoring and Therapeutic Decisions in the Intensive Care Unit
    Reithmeier, Thomas
    Isaak, Rimmon
    Sanchez-Porres, Renan
    ANASTHESIOLOGIE INTENSIVMEDIZIN NOTFALLMEDIZIN SCHMERZTHERAPIE, 2018, 53 (10): : 682 - 695
  • [27] Rational Therapeutic Decisions in Intensive Care Patients
    Riessen, Reimer
    Haap, Michael
    Marckmann, Georg
    Mahling, Moritz
    DEUTSCHE MEDIZINISCHE WOCHENSCHRIFT, 2020, 145 (20) : 1470 - 1475
  • [28] Therapeutic jurisprudence: A framework for evidence-informed health care policymaking
    Campbell, Amy T.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LAW AND PSYCHIATRY, 2010, 33 (5-6) : 281 - 292
  • [29] Latin America needs evidence-supported health-care policies
    Bernal-Serrano, Daniel
    Arreola-Ornelas, Hector
    LANCET, 2022, 400 (10364): : 1680 - 1680
  • [30] Study protocol: DEcisions in health Care to Introduce or Diffuse innovations using Evidence (DECIDE)
    Turner, Simon
    Morris, Stephen
    Sheringham, Jessica
    Hudson, Emma
    Fulop, Naomi J.
    IMPLEMENTATION SCIENCE, 2016, 11