TY - JOUR
T1 - Invitation to a dialogue between researchers and clinicians about evidence-based behavioral medicine
AU - Spring, Bonnie
AU - Pagoto, Sherry
AU - Kaufmann, Peter G.
AU - Whitlock, Evelyn P.
AU - Glasgow, Russell E.
AU - Smith, Timothy W.
AU - Trudeau, Kimberlee J.
AU - Davidson, Karina W.
N1 - Funding Information:
This article was supported by the National Institutes of Health Office of Behavioral and Social Science Research contract NLM 00–158/LTN.
PY - 2005
Y1 - 2005
N2 - Background: Evidence-based behavioral medicine (EBBM) aims to improve the process through which best scientific research evidence can be obtained and translated into best clinical decisions regarding behavioral treatments to improve health. Purpose: The objective was to examine some legitimate concerns raised by both clinicians and researchers about the evidence-based movement. Methods: This article begins with a discussion of clinicians' fears that EBBM devalues clinical judgment and the therapist-patient relationship, will be used to restrict practice, is unnecessary, and is based on research that is irrelevant to clinical decision making. Next we consider researchers' worries that EBBM neglects evidence not based on randomized controlled trials and ignores causal mechanisms. Results: We find that these fears, although understandable, largely reflect misinterpretations of the evidence-based movement. Further, it is suggested that behavioral medicine is in a unique position to enhance the evidence-based movement by encouraging increased attention to treatment mechanisms and to knowledge translation. Conclusions: Clinicians, researchers, and, importantly, the public will benefit from the evidence-based movement by having a health care system that is built on solid grounds of evidence in determining which treatments should constitute the standard of care. A full partnership between clinicians and researchers is called for to generate the practical, rigorous evidence base needed to take behavioral health treatments to the next level of scientific support and implementation.
AB - Background: Evidence-based behavioral medicine (EBBM) aims to improve the process through which best scientific research evidence can be obtained and translated into best clinical decisions regarding behavioral treatments to improve health. Purpose: The objective was to examine some legitimate concerns raised by both clinicians and researchers about the evidence-based movement. Methods: This article begins with a discussion of clinicians' fears that EBBM devalues clinical judgment and the therapist-patient relationship, will be used to restrict practice, is unnecessary, and is based on research that is irrelevant to clinical decision making. Next we consider researchers' worries that EBBM neglects evidence not based on randomized controlled trials and ignores causal mechanisms. Results: We find that these fears, although understandable, largely reflect misinterpretations of the evidence-based movement. Further, it is suggested that behavioral medicine is in a unique position to enhance the evidence-based movement by encouraging increased attention to treatment mechanisms and to knowledge translation. Conclusions: Clinicians, researchers, and, importantly, the public will benefit from the evidence-based movement by having a health care system that is built on solid grounds of evidence in determining which treatments should constitute the standard of care. A full partnership between clinicians and researchers is called for to generate the practical, rigorous evidence base needed to take behavioral health treatments to the next level of scientific support and implementation.
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U2 - 10.1207/s15324796abm3002_5
DO - 10.1207/s15324796abm3002_5
M3 - Article
C2 - 16173909
AN - SCOPUS:25444442576
SN - 0883-6612
VL - 30
SP - 125
EP - 137
JO - Annals of Behavioral Medicine
JF - Annals of Behavioral Medicine
IS - 2
ER -