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dc.date.accessioned2018-02-14T15:48:36Z
dc.date.available2018-02-14T15:48:36Z
dc.date.created2017-03-01T17:22:53Z
dc.date.issued2017
dc.identifier.citationWieringa, Sietse Engebretsen, Eivind Heggen, Kristin Greenhalgh, Trisha . Has evidence-based medicine ever been modern? A Latour-inspired understanding of a changing EBM. Journal of Evaluation In Clinical Practice. 2017, 23(5), 964-970
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10852/60097
dc.description.abstractEvidence-based health care (EBHC), previously evidence-based medicine (EBM), is considered by many to have modernized health care and brought it from an authority-based past to a more rationalist, scientific grounding. But recent concerns and criticisms pose serious challenges and urge us to look at the fundamentals of a changing EBHC. In this paper, we present French philosopher Bruno Latour's vision on modernity as a framework to discuss current changes in the discourse on EBHC/EBM. Drawing on Latour's work, we argue that the early EBM movement had a strong modernist agenda with an aim to “purify” clinical reality into a dichotomy of objective “evidence” from nature and subjective “preferences” from human society and culture. However, we argue that this shift has proved impossible to achieve in reality. Several recent developments appear to point to a demise of purified evidence in the EBHC discourse and a growing recognition—albeit implicit and undertheorized—that evidence in clinical decision making is relentlessly situated and contextual. The unique, individual patient, not abstracted truths from distant research studies, must be the starting point for clinical practice. It follows that the EBHC community needs to reconsider the assumption that science should be abstracted from culture and acknowledge that knowledge from human culture and nature both need translation and interpretation. The implications for clinical reasoning are far reaching. We offer some preliminary principles for conceptualizing EBHC as a “situated practice” rather than as a sequence of research-driven abstract decisions.en_US
dc.languageEN
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.rightsAttribution 4.0 International
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.titleHas evidence-based medicine ever been modern? A Latour-inspired understanding of a changing EBMen_US
dc.typeJournal articleen_US
dc.creator.authorWieringa, Sietse
dc.creator.authorEngebretsen, Eivind
dc.creator.authorHeggen, Kristin
dc.creator.authorGreenhalgh, Trisha
cristin.unitcode185,50,1,14
cristin.unitnameHelsevitenskapelig utdanningssenter
cristin.ispublishedtrue
cristin.fulltextoriginal
cristin.qualitycode1
dc.identifier.cristin1455128
dc.identifier.bibliographiccitationinfo:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:ctx&ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.jtitle=Journal of Evaluation In Clinical Practice&rft.volume=23&rft.spage=964&rft.date=2017
dc.identifier.jtitleJournal of Evaluation In Clinical Practice
dc.identifier.volume23
dc.identifier.issue5
dc.identifier.startpage964
dc.identifier.endpage970
dc.identifier.doihttp://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jep.12752
dc.identifier.urnURN:NBN:no-62767
dc.type.documentTidsskriftartikkelen_US
dc.type.peerreviewedPeer reviewed
dc.source.issn1356-1294
dc.identifier.fulltextFulltext https://www.duo.uio.no/bitstream/handle/10852/60097/1/Wieringa_et_al-2017-Journal_of_Evaluation_in_Clinical_Practice.pdf
dc.type.versionPublishedVersion


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