Six 'biases' against patients and carers in evidence-based medicine
- PMID: 26324223
- PMCID: PMC4556220
- DOI: 10.1186/s12916-015-0437-x
Six 'biases' against patients and carers in evidence-based medicine
Abstract
Background: Evidence-based medicine (EBM) is maturing from its early focus on epidemiology to embrace a wider range of disciplines and methodologies. At the heart of EBM is the patient, whose informed choices have long been recognised as paramount. However, good evidence-based care is more than choices.
Discussion: We discuss six potential 'biases' in EBM that may inadvertently devalue the patient and carer agenda: limited patient input to research design, low status given to experience in the hierarchy of evidence, a tendency to conflate patient-centred consulting with use of decision tools; insufficient attention to power imbalances that suppress the patient's voice, over-emphasis on the clinical consultation, and focus on people who seek and obtain care (rather than the hidden denominator of those that do not seek or cannot access care). To reduce these 'biases', EBM should embrace patient involvement in research, make more systematic use of individual ('personally significant') evidence, take a more interdisciplinary and humanistic view of consultations, address unequal power dynamics in healthcare encounters, support patient communities, and address the inverse care law.
Comment in
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'All the King's horses . . .’: the problematical fate of born-again evidence-based medicine: commentary on Greenhalgh, T., Snow, R., Ryan, S., Rees, S., and Salisbury, H. (2015) six 'biases' against patients and carers in evidence-based medicine. BioMed Central Medicine, 13:200.J Eval Clin Pract. 2015 Dec;21(6):E1-10. doi: 10.1111/jep.12492. J Eval Clin Pract. 2015. PMID: 26710931
References
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- Gawande A. Being mortal. Toronto: Doubleday Canada; 2014.
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