Exploration of Concerns about the Evidence-Based Guideline Approach in Conservation Management: Hints from Medical Practice.

Environ Manage

Department of Biometry and Environmental System Analysis, University of Freiburg, Tennenbacher Str. 4, 79106, Freiburg, Germany.

Published: September 2020

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The text emphasizes the crucial role of evidence in decision-making for policy and scientific contexts, noting that while evidence-based guidelines are common in medicine, similar frameworks for environmental management, particularly in forestry, are largely lacking.
  • - Through interviews with forest practitioners, 28 concerns about potential evidence-based guidelines for forest conservation were identified, revealing that clear, context-specific recommendations are preferred and that existing evidence is often fragmented.
  • - Major findings highlight that the complexity of the evidence framework, concerns about forest multifunctionality, and the need for more tailored guidelines reflect similar challenges faced in creating medical guidelines, but also reveal unique issues specific to forestry.

Article Abstract

The importance of using evidence in decision-making is frequently highlighted in policy reports and scientific papers. However, subjective judgments of the reliability of environmental evidence vary widely, and large-scale systematic searches for evidence are only common for climate-related topics. In the medical field, evidence-based guidelines are routinely used to guide treatments. In the management of multiple-use landscapes similar guidelines could substantially narrow the science-practice gap but are largely absent. The challenges potential guidelines face are therefore unknown. For the case of forest conservation, we conducted 14 semistructured interviews with mainly forest practitioners and presented them an example medical guideline together with evidence-based statements on forest conservation (hereinafter: statement paper). We identified 28 concerns related to potential evidence-based guidelines in forest conservation. The interviews yielded approximately three major findings. First, recommendations on forest conservation are better accepted if they include clear instructions and are formulated for a specific context. Fragmentary conservation evidence complicates the formulation of specific recommendations. Second, the level of evidence framework, which indicates the strength of the available evidence, is perceived as too complex. Third, neglecting forest multifunctionality in a potential guideline hampers its application but, if addressed, potentially weakens its ecological relevance. We show that major concerns about potential evidence-based conservation guidelines are similar to the challenges experienced by medical guidelines. We also identify concerns unique to forestry.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7434788PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00267-020-01312-6DOI Listing

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