Evidence-Based Medicine and Patient-Centred Care

a Patient’s Best Interest Analysis

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.36592/opiniaofilosofica.v14.1072

Palavras-chave:

Medicine, Patient’s Interest, Medical Diagnosis, Diseases, Evidence-Based Medicine

Resumo

Proponents of Evidence-Based Medicine (EBM) argue that EBM’s approach to medicine promotes good clinical decisions while it escapes adverse issues such as implicit bias. However, EBM approaches the causation of diseases from a homogenous standpoint; that is, EBM overgeneralises evidence and the intervention measures it provides. As a result, proponents of Patient-Centred Care (PCC) allude that the strictness of EBM towards evidence impairs it from considering case-by-case treatment of patients but a generalised method of intervention. Given this problem, I argue that EBM cannot be considered a medical approach to practising medicine and conducting medical research that is in the best interest of individual patients, especially patients that prefer alternative interventions other than the methods of EBM. I conclude by drawing from the best features of EBM and PCC to create an alternative that accommodates the interests of both EBM and PCC patients.

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Publicado

2023-02-28

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Evidence-Based Medicine and Patient-Centred Care: a Patient’s Best Interest Analysis. (2023). Revista Opinião Filosófica, 14, 1-18. https://doi.org/10.36592/opiniaofilosofica.v14.1072