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11.
J Epidemiol Community Health ; 51(6): 623-9, 1997 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-9519124

ABSTRACT

As presently understood, evidence based medicine aims to advance practice from its traditional unverifiable mix of art and science to rational use of measurable inputs and outputs. In practice, however, its advocates accept uncritically a desocialised definition of science, assume that major clinical decisions are taken at the level of secondary specialist rather than primary generalist care, and ignore the multiple nature of most clinical problems, as well as the complexity of social problems within which clinical problems arise and have to be solved. These reductionist assumptions derive from the use of evidence based medicine as a tool for managed care in a transactional model for consultations. If these assumptions persist, they will strengthen reification of disease and promote the episodic output of process regardless of health outcome. We need to work within a different paradigm based on development of patients as co-producers rather than consumers, promoting continuing output of health gain through shared decisions using all relevant evidence, within a broader, socialised definition of science. Adoption of this model would require a major social and cultural shift for health professionals. This shift has already begun, promoted by changes in public attitudes to professional authority, changes in the relation of professionals to managers, and pressures for improved effectiveness and efficiency which, contrary to received wisdom, seem more likely to endorse cooperative than transactional clinical production. Progress on these lines is resisted by rapidly growing and extremely powerful economic and political interests. Health professionals and strategists have yet to recognise and admit the existence of this choice.


Subject(s)
Evidence-Based Medicine , Social Medicine , Decision Making , Economics, Medical , Health Care Reform , Managed Care Programs , State Medicine , United Kingdom
14.
J Public Health Med ; 17(4): 383-6, 1995 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8639335

ABSTRACT

NHS market 'reforms' and the world-wide drift toward managed competition in health services rest on a fundamental misunderstanding of the nature of health production through medical and nursing care. Optimally efficient health production depends on a general shift of patients from their traditional role as passive or adversarial consumers, to become producers of healthy jointly with their health professionals, in an essentially co-operative rather than competitive public service.


Subject(s)
Health Care Reform/economics , Managed Competition/economics , Patient Participation/economics , State Medicine/economics , Cost Control/trends , Forecasting , Humans , United Kingdom
15.
Br J Gen Pract ; 44(389): 593, 1994 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7748678
19.
BMJ ; 306(6884): 1072, 1993 Apr 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8490529
20.
Lancet ; 341(8846): 700, 1993 Mar 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-8095612
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