Affiliation:
1. Centre Hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal (CHUM), Montreal , Quebec , Canada
2. University of Ottawa and Ottawa Hospital Research Institute , Ottawa, Ontario , Canada
3. University of Alberta Hospital, Mackenzie Health Sciences Center , Edmonton, Alberta , Canada
Abstract
Abstract
The temptation to use prospective observational studies (POS) instead of conducting difficult trials (RCTs) has always existed, but with the advent of powerful computers and large databases, it can become almost irresistible. We examine the potential consequences, were this to occur, by comparing two hypothetical studies of a new treatment: one RCT, and one POS. The POS inevitably submits more patients to inferior research methodology. In RCTs, patients are clearly informed of the research context, and 1:1 randomized allocation between experimental and validated treatment balances risks for each patient. In POS, for each patient, the risks of receiving inferior treatment are impossible to estimate. The research context and the uncertainty are down-played, and patients and clinicians are at risk of becoming passive research subjects in studies performed from an outsider’s view, which potentially has extraneous objectives, and is conducted without their explicit, autonomous, and voluntary involvement and consent.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Cited by
1 articles.
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1. Public Bioethics Amidst a Pluralist People: A Project of Presumption, Despair, or Hope?;The Journal of Medicine and Philosophy: A Forum for Bioethics and Philosophy of Medicine;2024-07-11