Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8604173 | The American Journal of Medicine | 2017 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Evidence based medicine, using randomized controlled trials and meta-analyses as the major tools and sources of evidence about average results for heterogeneous groups of patients, developed as a reaction against poorly designed observational treatment research and physician reliance on personal experience with other patients as a guide to decision-making about a patient at hand. However, these tools do not answer the clinician's question: “Will a given therapeutic regimen help my patient at a given point in her/his clinical course?” We introduce fine-grained profiling of the patient at hand, accompanied by comparative evidence of responses from approximate matches to this patient on whom a contemplated treatment has/has not been administered. This represents medicine based evidence that is tuned to decision-making for the particular patient.
Keywords
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Authors
Ralph I. MD, MACP, Allison PhD, Roberto MD, Burton H. PhD,