Limitations of Medical Research and Evidence at the Patient-Clinician Encounter Scale

被引:10
|
作者
Morris, Alan H. [1 ,2 ]
Ioannidis, John P. A. [3 ]
机构
[1] Intermt Healthcare, Intermt Med Ctr, Dept Med, Div Pulm, Salt Lake City, UT USA
[2] Intermt Healthcare, Intermt Med Ctr, Dept Med, Crit Care Div, Salt Lake City, UT USA
[3] Stanford Univ, Dept Med, Sch Med, Stanford Prevent Res Ctr, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院; 美国医疗保健研究与质量局;
关键词
INTENSIVE INSULIN THERAPY; CONFLICTS-OF-INTEREST; DECISION-SUPPORT-SYSTEMS; GLUCOSE CONTROL; HEALTH-CARE; BLOOD-GLUCOSE; HOSPITALIZED-PATIENTS; COGNITIVE-PSYCHOLOGY; CRITICAL-APPRAISAL; COMMON DISEASES;
D O I
10.1378/chest.12-1908
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
We explore some philosophical and scientific underpinnings of clinical research and evidence at the patient-clinician encounter scale. Insufficient evidence and a common failure to use replicable and sound research methods limit us. Both patients and health care may be, in part, complex nonlinear chaotic systems, and predicting their outcomes is a challenge. When trustworthy (credible) evidence is lacking, making correct clinical choices is often a low-probability exercise. Thus, human (clinician) error and consequent injury to patients appear inevitable. Individual clinician decision-makers operate under the philosophical influence of Adam Smith's "invisible hand" with resulting optimism that they will eventually make the right choices and cause health benefits. The presumption of an effective "invisible hand" operating in health-care delivery has supported a model in which individual clinicians struggle to practice medicine, as they see fit based on their own intuitions and preferences (and biases) despite the obvious complexity, errors, noise, and lack of evidence pervading the system. Not surprisingly, the "invisible hand" does not appear to produce the desired community health benefits. Obtaining a benefit at the patient-clinician encounter scale requires human (clinician) behavior modification. We believe that serious rethinking and restructuring of the clinical research and care delivery systems is necessary to assure the profession and the public that we continue to do more good than harm. We need to evaluate whether, and how, detailed decision-support tools may enable reproducible clinician behavior and beneficial use of evidence. CHEST 2013; 143(4):1127-1135
引用
下载
收藏
页码:1127 / 1135
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Patient-clinician communication in a dental setting: a pilot study
    A. Waylen
    G. Makoul
    Y. Albeyatti
    British Dental Journal, 2015, 218 : 585 - 588
  • [42] A new tool for improving patient-clinician communication in schizophrenia
    van Os, J
    Altamura, AC
    Bobes, J
    Gerlach, J
    Hellewell, JSE
    Kasper, S
    Naber, D
    Robert, P
    EUROPEAN NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY, 2004, 14 : S281 - S281
  • [43] Improving the Patient-Clinician and Parent-Clinician Partnership in Atopic Dermatitis Management
    Mancini, Anthony J.
    Paller, Amy S.
    Simpson, Eric L.
    Ellis, Charles N.
    Eichenfield, Lawrence F.
    SEMINARS IN CUTANEOUS MEDICINE AND SURGERY, 2012, 31 (03) : S23 - S28
  • [44] Patient-Clinician Diagnostic Concordance upon Hospital Admission
    Lam, Alyssa
    Plombon, Savanna
    Garber, Alison
    Garabedian, Pamela
    Rozenblum, Ronen
    Griffin, Jacqueline A.
    Schnipper, Jeffrey L.
    Lipsitz, Stuart R.
    Bates, David W.
    Dalal, Anuj K.
    APPLIED CLINICAL INFORMATICS, 2024, 15 (04): : 733 - 742
  • [45] THE PATIENT-CLINICIAN RELATIONSHIP ON TWITTER WITH RESPECT TO INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE
    Silverman, Anna L.
    Khan, Ali A.
    Rowe, Anthony
    Rowe, Samantha
    Tick, Matthew
    Testa, Stephen
    Dodds, Kerian
    Alabbas, Bedoor
    Borum, Marie L.
    GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2018, 154 (06) : S468 - S469
  • [46] Perceptions of Patient-Clinician Communication in Black Postpartum Patients With Hypertension
    Fant, Melanie
    JOGNN-JOURNAL OF OBSTETRIC GYNECOLOGIC AND NEONATAL NURSING, 2024, 53 (04): : S81 - S81
  • [47] The digital transformation of medicine can revitalize the patient-clinician relationship
    Warraich, Haider J.
    Califf, Robert M.
    Krumholz, Harlan M.
    NPJ DIGITAL MEDICINE, 2018, 1
  • [48] Understanding the influences and impact of patient-clinician communication in cancer care
    Lafata, Jennifer Elston
    Shay, Laura A.
    Winship, Jodi M.
    HEALTH EXPECTATIONS, 2017, 20 (06) : 1385 - 1392
  • [49] The digital transformation of medicine can revitalize the patient-clinician relationship
    Haider J. Warraich
    Robert M. Califf
    Harlan M. Krumholz
    npj Digital Medicine, 1
  • [50] Management of abnormal uterine bleeding on anticoagulation: the patient-clinician perspective
    Bannow, Bethany T. Samuelson
    JOURNAL OF THROMBOSIS AND HAEMOSTASIS, 2024, 22 (07) : 1819 - 1825