CFP - Evidence-Based Medicine Reconsidered
Date/Time
11/17/2024
12:00 AM - 12:00 AM Eastern
12:00 AM - 12:00 AM Eastern
Event Type(s)
Call for Papers (Enter the SUBMISSION DEADLINE as the date above. Submit EVENT separately.)
Event Description
Evidence-Based Medicine Reconsidered
Conference Dates: April 5-6th, 2025
10th Floor Cathedral of Learning
Senior Visiting Fellow Conference by Carl HoeferThe evidence-based medicine (EBM) movement began in the 1980s, reached its peak perhaps in the 1990s, and has since then enjoyed the status of orthodoxy, despite many criticisms being raised among medical practitioners and researchers. Philosophers of medicine have frequently criticized EBM’s hierarchies and rigid precepts, especially the “gold standard” status of randomized controlled trials (RCTs). A pluralistic approach to evidence in medicine has been increasingly popular in recent years, in which mechanistic evidence and reasoning, observational studies of many kinds and RCTs are assessed for value on a case-by-case basis. But does this trend away from the EBM hierarchy go too far and risk the reintroduction of the same biased, motivated evidence-gathering practices that originally motivated the EBM movement? What light can recent experiences in medicine and public health (e.g., during the covid-19 pandemic) shed on these issues?
Location
University of Pittsburgh
University of Pittsburgh 10th Floor of the Cathedral of Learning
Pittsburgh, PA 15260
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University of Pittsburgh 10th Floor of the Cathedral of Learning
Pittsburgh, PA 15260
click here for Google Maps
Details
Call for Abstracts
We invite papers which address topics related to evidence in medicine, broadly speaking. These include, but are not limited to:
We invite papers which address topics related to evidence in medicine, broadly speaking. These include, but are not limited to:
- Defenses (or criticisms) of the supposed superiority of RCTs over observational studies, mechanistic studies, modeling, and individual clinical judgment;
- Discussions of lessons that philosophy of medicine or EBM can learn from recent experiences;
- Papers offering theoretical discussions of procedures for integrating and evaluating evidence from different sources;
- The merits and limitations of emerging kinds of medical evidence, such as adaptive trials, so-called real-world evidence, precision or personalized medicine research, and big data research
- Evidence in diverse contexts, such as clinical practice, alternative healthcare, drug or device regulation, public health, and health policy.
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