Philosophical essentials in evidence-based medicine : evaluating the epistemological role of double blinding and placebo controls

The Evidence-Based Medicine (EBM) movement endorses a hierarchy of evidence that places randomized controlled trials at the top. More specifically, double-blind, placebo- controlled trials are often considered to be the 'best of the best'. This view leads to the paradox that treatments tha...

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Main Author: Howick, Jeremy
Published: London School of Economics and Political Science (University of London) 2008
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616
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.645778
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6457782016-08-04T03:24:23ZPhilosophical essentials in evidence-based medicine : evaluating the epistemological role of double blinding and placebo controlsHowick, Jeremy2008The Evidence-Based Medicine (EBM) movement endorses a hierarchy of evidence that places randomized controlled trials at the top. More specifically, double-blind, placebo- controlled trials are often considered to be the 'best of the best'. This view leads to the paradox that treatments that seem to be most strongly supported by evidence, ranging from tracheotomies to rabies vaccines, have never been tested in randomized trials of any description and are hence supported by (allegedly) sub-optimal evidence. Moreover many of these treatments do not seem supportable by best evidence - how, for example do we keep the surgeons who perform tracheotomies 'blind'. After a brief introduction (chapter 1), and review of the literature (chapter 2), I argue that criticisms of the EBM hierarchy can be launched from the simple basis that best evidence rules out the most plausible rival hypothesis (chapter 3). To examine the relative evidential weight of placebo controlled trials compared to 'active' controlled trials (in which the control treatment is an existing established treatment) requires a good deal of conceptual work. I defend a modified version of Grunbaum's (1981/1986) definition of placebos (chapter 4), then provide constraints on what can count as a 'legitimate' placebo control (chapter 5). Next, I explain why double-blinding does not always rule out additional rival hypotheses. I then argue that the arguments for the superiority of placebo controls are flawed. The 'assay sensitivity' argument is limited in scope and based on a misconception about the nature of placebo controls (chapter 7), while the claim that only placebo controlled trials measure the absolute effect size relies on the questionable assumption that placebo and non-placebo effects add rather than interact (chapter 8). I conclude that the evidence hierarchy endorsed by EBM does not stand on solid foundations.616London School of Economics and Political Science (University of London)http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.645778http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/2973/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 616
spellingShingle 616
Howick, Jeremy
Philosophical essentials in evidence-based medicine : evaluating the epistemological role of double blinding and placebo controls
description The Evidence-Based Medicine (EBM) movement endorses a hierarchy of evidence that places randomized controlled trials at the top. More specifically, double-blind, placebo- controlled trials are often considered to be the 'best of the best'. This view leads to the paradox that treatments that seem to be most strongly supported by evidence, ranging from tracheotomies to rabies vaccines, have never been tested in randomized trials of any description and are hence supported by (allegedly) sub-optimal evidence. Moreover many of these treatments do not seem supportable by best evidence - how, for example do we keep the surgeons who perform tracheotomies 'blind'. After a brief introduction (chapter 1), and review of the literature (chapter 2), I argue that criticisms of the EBM hierarchy can be launched from the simple basis that best evidence rules out the most plausible rival hypothesis (chapter 3). To examine the relative evidential weight of placebo controlled trials compared to 'active' controlled trials (in which the control treatment is an existing established treatment) requires a good deal of conceptual work. I defend a modified version of Grunbaum's (1981/1986) definition of placebos (chapter 4), then provide constraints on what can count as a 'legitimate' placebo control (chapter 5). Next, I explain why double-blinding does not always rule out additional rival hypotheses. I then argue that the arguments for the superiority of placebo controls are flawed. The 'assay sensitivity' argument is limited in scope and based on a misconception about the nature of placebo controls (chapter 7), while the claim that only placebo controlled trials measure the absolute effect size relies on the questionable assumption that placebo and non-placebo effects add rather than interact (chapter 8). I conclude that the evidence hierarchy endorsed by EBM does not stand on solid foundations.
author Howick, Jeremy
author_facet Howick, Jeremy
author_sort Howick, Jeremy
title Philosophical essentials in evidence-based medicine : evaluating the epistemological role of double blinding and placebo controls
title_short Philosophical essentials in evidence-based medicine : evaluating the epistemological role of double blinding and placebo controls
title_full Philosophical essentials in evidence-based medicine : evaluating the epistemological role of double blinding and placebo controls
title_fullStr Philosophical essentials in evidence-based medicine : evaluating the epistemological role of double blinding and placebo controls
title_full_unstemmed Philosophical essentials in evidence-based medicine : evaluating the epistemological role of double blinding and placebo controls
title_sort philosophical essentials in evidence-based medicine : evaluating the epistemological role of double blinding and placebo controls
publisher London School of Economics and Political Science (University of London)
publishDate 2008
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.645778
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