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Oct 20, 2008 · The concept of "evidence-based ethics", modeled after the concept of evidence-based medicine, has increasingly found application in international journals in the past decade, ranging from a relatively uncritical use of the term [2–5] to attempts at its explication [6, 7] to variously justified repudiations of the term [8, 9]. However, so far this discussion has been lacking a thorough ...
- Daniel Strech
- daniel.strech@uni-tuebingen.de
- 2008
What is clear, however, is evidence-based ethics' close methodological proximity to evidence-based medicine, as the language of "conscientious and judicious use of best evidence" is recognisably lifted from the early programmatic literature on evidence-based medicine . The implications of this relationship are the focus of this paper, as evidence-based medicine offers a distinct accounting of ...
Aug 23, 2021 · The ‘evidence-based’ moniker is used in a range of ways, including evidence-based policy, evidence-based research and evidence-based practice. Sometimes it is softened into evidence-informed or evidence-aware, which signal greater flexibility in the selection (and deselection) of different evidence types (Nevo and Slonim-Nevo, 2011). In ...
- Leah Tomkins, Alexandra Bristow
- 2021
Tonelli defines evidence-based medicine as a twofold concept. First, EBM is an optimal method for developing and describing population-based medical evidence—what he calls “a school of medical epistemology” [4]. Secondly, EBM “attempts to describe a clinical practice centered on evidence derived from clinical studies” [4].
- Joshua J. Goldman, Tiffany L. Shih
- 2011
She went on to state that Permanente Medicine is ethical care. 1 Without describing the ethics associated with all these pillars, I will discuss the ethics of evidence-based patient care from a treatment perspective (although many of the concepts presented likely apply to prevention, diagnosis, and prognosis as well). Assessing the ethics of evidence-based medicine (EBM) is important because ...
It has been rapidly taken up in all clinical fields and has been regarded as revolutionary by some and, by others, as the unrivaled standard by which medicine is to be practiced [1]. The descriptor “evidence-based” is now ubiquitous, but there are multiple claims to approaches being evidence-based, and these show considerable heterogeneity [2].
“Evidence-based medicine” (EBM), a term coined in the early 1990s, has become a key component of medical education and clinical practice internationally. January’s authors consider how physicians should best use EBM in medical decision making—balancing statistical evidence from systematic research with their own knowledge and experience and the unique characteristics and values of the ...