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David Isaacs Departments of
Education and Medicine, New Children's Hospital, Westmead, NSW
2145, Australia
Correspondence to: D Isaacs davidi{at}nch.edu.au
Clinical decisions should, as far as possible, be evidence
based. So runs the current clinical dogma.
1 2
We are
urged to lump all the relevant randomised controlled trials into one giant meta-analysis and come out with a combined odds ratio for all
decisions. Physicians, surgeons, nurses are doing it3-5; soon even the lawyers will be using evidence based
practice.6 But what if there is no evidence on which to
base a clinical decision?
We, two humble clinicians ever ready for advice and
guidance, asked our colleagues what they would do if faced with a
clinical problem for which there are no randomised controlled trials
and no good evidence. We found ourselves faced with several personality based opinions, as would be expected in a teaching hospital. The personalities transcend the disciplines, with the exception of surgery,
in which discipline transcends personality. We categorised their
replies, on the basis of no evidence whatsoever, as
follows.
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Participants, methods, and results
Top
Participants, methods, and...
Comment
References
Eminence based medicine
The more senior the colleague, the
less importance he or she placed on the need for anything as mundane as
evidence. Experience, it seems, is worth any amount of evidence. These
colleagues have a touching faith in clinical experience, which has been
defined as "making the same mistakes with increasing confidence over
an impressive number of years."7 The eminent physician's white hair and balding pate are called the "halo" effect.
Vehemence based medicine
The substitution of volume for
evidence is an effective technique for brow beating your more timorous colleagues and for convincing relatives of your ability.
Eloquence based medicine
The year round suntan, carnation
in the button hole, silk tie, Armani suit, and tongue should all be
equally smooth. Sartorial elegance and verbal eloquence are powerful
substitutes for evidence.
Providence based medicine
If the caring practitioner has no
idea of what to do next, the decision may be best left in the hands of
the Almighty. Too many clinicians, unfortunately, are unable to resist
giving God a hand with the decision making.
Diffidence based medicine
Some doctors see a problem and
look for an answer. Others merely see a problem. The diffident doctor may do nothing from a sense of despair. This, of course, may be better
than doing something merely because it hurts the doctor's pride to do
nothing.
Nervousness based medicine
Fear of litigation is a powerful
stimulus to overinvestigation and overtreatment. In an atmosphere of
litigation phobia, the only bad test is the test you didn't think of ordering.
Confidence based medicine
This is restricted to surgeons (table).
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Comment |
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There are plenty of alternatives for the practising
physician in the absence of evidence. This is what makes medicine
an art as well as a science.
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Acknowledgments |
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Contributors: DI and DF each contributed half the jokes and will both act as guarantors.
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Footnotes |
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Funding: None.
Competing interests: None declared.
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References |
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| 1. |
Evidence Based Medicine Working Group.
Evidence-based medicine: a new approach to teaching the practice of medicine.
JAMA
1992;
268:
2420-2425 |
| 2. |
Rosenberg W, Donald A.
Evidence based medicine: an approach to clinical problem solving.
BMJ
1995;
310:
1122-1126 |
| 3. |
Sackett DL, Rosenberg WM, Gray JAM, Haynes RB, Richardson WS.
Evidence based medicine: what it is and what it isn't.
BMJ
1996;
312:
71-72 |
| 4. | Solomon MJ, McLeod RS. Surgery and the randomised controlled trial: past, present and future. Med J Aust 1998; 169: 380-383[Medline]. |
| 5. | McClarey M. Implementing clinical effectiveness. Nursing Management 1998; 5: 16-19. |
| 6. | EBM and the IMF. J Exponential Salaries 1999; 99: 1-9. |
| 7. | O'Donnell M. A sceptic's medical dictionary. London: BMJ Books, 1997. |
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