Zeitschrift für ärztliche Fortbildung und Qualitätssicherung
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Z Arztl Fortbild Qualitatssich · Jul 2003
[Evidence-based medicine as a model of decision making in clinical practice].
The way how we apply the principles of evidence-based medicine in the real clinical world is based on a number of implicitly assumed theoretical models. The aim of the present article is to identify these theories and use their impact to explain their importance for the application of evidence-based medicine. ⋯ In the context of these theories, there are three archetypal models of clinical decision making. These include the intuitive, the hypothesis-based and the evidence-based approach. In this sense, evidence-based medicine is a hermeneutic model for making clinical decisions. The mean impact of evidence-based medicine is the introduction of the best external evidence as a basis of the hermeneutic clinical casework. In the model of the "best external evidence", the clinician experiences a great change in clinical decision making. This change is generated by crossing the border from applying scientific clinical hypotheses to systematically identified and reviewed results of high-quality research work. In this sense, hermeneutic casework demonstrates that there is a contradictory unity between evidence-based clinical data and the clinician's understanding of a clinical case--a contradiction that may only be solved by the clinician's internal evidence.