Ethical reflections on Evidence Based Medicine

Submitted: 3 May 2013
Accepted: 3 May 2013
Published: 3 May 2013
Abstract Views: 1051
PDF: 744
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BACKGROUND According to Potter's point of view, medical ethics is the science of survival, a bridge between humanistic and scientific culture. The working out of judgements on right or wrong referred to the human being are studied by this science. Methodological quality is fundamental in clinical research, and several technical issues are of paramount importance in trying to answer to the final question what is the true, the right thing?. We know they are essential aspects as in medical ethics as in evidence based practice.
AIM OF THE STUDY The aim of this paper is to talk about relationships and implications between ethical issues and Evidence Based Medicine (EBM).
DISCUSSION EBM represents a new paradigm that introduces new concepts to guide medical-decision making and health-care planning. Its principles are deeply rooted in clinical research methodology since information are derived from sound studies of strong quality. Health-care professionals have to deal with methodological concepts for critical appraisal of literature and implementation of evidences in clinical practice and healthcare planning. The central role of EBM in medical ethics is obvious, but a risk could be possible. The shift from Hippocratic point of view to community-centred one could lose sight of the centrality of the patient.
CONCLUSION Both EBM principles and the needs to adequately response to economic restrictions urge a balance between individual and community ethics. All this has to represent an opportunity to place the patient at the centre of medical action considering at the same time community ethics as systemic aim, but without forgetting the risk that economic restrictions push towards veterinary ethics where herd is central and individual needs do not exist.

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How to Cite

Corrao, S. (2013). Ethical reflections on Evidence Based Medicine. Italian Journal of Medicine, 1(2), 67–69. https://doi.org/10.4081/itjm.2007.2.67