• J Eval Clin Pract · Dec 2009

    The intended and unintended consequences of clinical guidelines.

    • Rebecca J Shackelton, Lisa D Marceau, Carol L Link, and John B McKinlay.
    • New England Research Institutes, Watertown, Massachusetts, USA. rshackelton@neriscience.com
    • J Eval Clin Pract. 2009 Dec 1; 15 (6): 1035-42.

    ObjectivesFirst, we examine whether clinical guidelines, designed to improve health care and reduce disparities in clinical practice, are achieving their intended consequences. Second, we contemplate potential unintended consequences of clinical guidelines.MethodAs part of a factorial experiment we presented primary care doctors (n = 192) with clinically authentic vignettes of a 'patient' with already diagnosed diabetes with an emerging foot neuropathy. Their proposed clinical actions were compared with established practice guidelines for this clinical situation.ResultsAfter establishing the existence of consistent socioeconomic disparities in the proposed management of the case presented, we found that reported use of practice guidelines had no measurable effect towards their reduction (one intended consequence). However, the reported use of practice guidelines appeared to precipitate more clinical actions, without eliminating documented disparities.ConclusionsConsistent with other research we find that clinical practice guidelines are not producing a principal intended result, and may even produce unintended consequences.

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