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How can evidence-based medicine help patients in general practice?

How can evidence-based medicine help patients in general practice? Family Practice Vol. 13, No. 6 © Oxford University Press 1996 Printed in Great Britain How can evidence-based medicine help patients in general practice? Kieran Sweeney Family doctors are generalise: any experience which problems with which GPS are faced. This is clearly an individual perceives as problematic can become the appropriate, as the evidence suggests that patients are legitimate concern of a GP, if it is brought up in a being denied the benefits of the results of well controlled consultation. One of the fundamental tasks of the GP clinical trials.89 is to interpret a person's story. Here, the doctor tries But the description of EBM by Rosenberg,10 and an to establish if the person's sense of unease suggests the early example of its application if Professor Sackett's onset of a discrete identifiable disease, or has its origins own acute medical unit by Ellis et al.n did not escape in other forms of stress, for example, personal un- criticism. Critics argued that the concept of diagnosis happiness or unfavourable socio-economic circum- in EBM is too narrow and biomedical, and inap- stances.1 In the process, the doctor may draw on propriately reduces the complexity of clinical prob- biomedical diagnostic pathways, http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Family Practice Oxford University Press

How can evidence-based medicine help patients in general practice?

Family Practice , Volume 13 (6) – Jan 1, 1996

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Publisher
Oxford University Press
Copyright
© Published by Oxford University Press.
ISSN
0263-2136
eISSN
1460-2229
Publisher site
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Abstract

Family Practice Vol. 13, No. 6 © Oxford University Press 1996 Printed in Great Britain How can evidence-based medicine help patients in general practice? Kieran Sweeney Family doctors are generalise: any experience which problems with which GPS are faced. This is clearly an individual perceives as problematic can become the appropriate, as the evidence suggests that patients are legitimate concern of a GP, if it is brought up in a being denied the benefits of the results of well controlled consultation. One of the fundamental tasks of the GP clinical trials.89 is to interpret a person's story. Here, the doctor tries But the description of EBM by Rosenberg,10 and an to establish if the person's sense of unease suggests the early example of its application if Professor Sackett's onset of a discrete identifiable disease, or has its origins own acute medical unit by Ellis et al.n did not escape in other forms of stress, for example, personal un- criticism. Critics argued that the concept of diagnosis happiness or unfavourable socio-economic circum- in EBM is too narrow and biomedical, and inap- stances.1 In the process, the doctor may draw on propriately reduces the complexity of clinical prob- biomedical diagnostic pathways,

Journal

Family PracticeOxford University Press

Published: Jan 1, 1996

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