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Medical Humanities 2005;31:23-30; doi:10.1136/jmh.2004.000195
Copyright © 2005 by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd & Institute of Medical Ethics.
J Med Ethics; Medical Humanities 2005;31:23-30
© 2005 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd & Institute of Medical Ethics

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

False dichotomies: EBM, clinical freedom, and the art of medicine

M Parker

Correspondence to:
Correspondence to:
M Parker
School of Medicine UQ, Herston Rd, Herston, Qld 4006, Australia; m.parker{at}uq.edu.au

According to numerous commentators, clinical freedom, the art of medicine, and, by implication, a degree of patient welfare, are threatened by evidence based medicine (EBM). As EBM has developed over the last fifteen years, claims about better evidence for medical treatments, and improvements in healthcare delivery, have been matched by critiques of EBM’s reductionism and uniformity, its problematic application to individual patients, and its alleged denial of the continuing need for clinical interpretation, insight, and judgment. Most of these attacks on EBM and defences of clinical freedom fail. They are based on erroneous understandings of the relationships between inductive knowledge, clinical uncertainty, and action. Evidence based medicine is a necessary condition for clinical freedom, not a threat to it, and EBM is not something to be balanced with either clinical experience or patient preferences. The art and science of medicine are more conceptually and practically connected than the defenders of clinical freedom, whatever they conceive that to be, are willing to admit.

Abbreviations: EBM, evidence based medicine; RCT, random controlled trial

Keywords: evidence based medicine; clinical judgment; guidelines; induction; values


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