AI Article Synopsis

  • Evidence-based medicine (EBM) has clear benefits, but relying solely on scientific literature can lead to issues like bias and lack of reproducibility.
  • This narrow focus may overlook important factors such as the physician's clinical experience and the unique characteristics of individual patients.
  • Evidence-based practice expands on EBM by integrating clinical expertise and patient values, ensuring that the best treatment is chosen for each individual.*

Article Abstract

On the surface, the benefits of evidence-based medicine (EBM) seem self-evident. However, reliance on the scientific literature alone has limitations. Studies may be biased, statistically fragile, and/or not reproducible. Reliance solely on EBM may ignore physician clinical experience and individual patient characteristics and input. Reliance solely on EBM may overvalue quantitative, statistical significance, resulting in a false sense of certainty. Reliance solely on EBM may fail to consider lack of generalizability of published studies to individually unique patients. The concept of evidence-based practice goes beyond EBM and incorporates (1) EBM, (2) clinical expertise, and (3) individual patient characteristics, values, and preferences. Even if branded as evidence-based, a suggested treatment may not be the best treatment. Evidence-based practice must be considered before determining what is best for our patients.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.arthro.2023.01.001DOI Listing

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