检验评估临床结果与非临床结果的整体框架

IF 2.1 4区 医学 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Robert G. Lingard, Louise Horstmanshof
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引用次数: 0

摘要

虽然临床研究试图评估各种类型的结果,但尚未确定一个框架,允许一个足够广泛的方法来评估临床结果,同时评估非临床结果。本文的目的是通过借鉴对共同利益的不同理解,研究一个统一的框架,以评估临床结果与非临床结果并行。拟议的框架必须具有广泛的应用,考虑到不同学科方法中可能出现的各种类型的结果,并确定临床研究参与者可能经历的益处或危害。方法对Boltanski和thsamvenot提出的共同利益的六种不同定义进行分析。共同利益的六个概念确定了评估结果是有益还是有害的组织原则。它还确定了被研究对象和研究人员被主体化的各种方式。有目的地对报告痴呆症患者结果的学术文献进行抽样,以证明共同利益的六种定义的应用。基于公共利益可以被表达为超出纯粹临床、技术测量结果的多个感知商品的假设,来自临床研究的广泛结果可以并行评估。此外,干预的主体可以用非临床语言描述,从而尊重作为人类和代理人对他们可能很重要的许多角色。Boltanski和thsamuvenot的价值经济框架允许研究结果根据共同利益的六个定义进行一致的评估。共同利益的定义包含六个不同的领域:公民、家庭、工业、灵感、市场和舆论(或名人)。每个世界都是围绕一个更高的共同原则构建的,通过这个原则,共同利益在这个特定的世界中被定义。在痴呆症患者中进行研究的例子通过确定广泛的非临床结果证明了这一框架的稳健性。这些扩展了对参与者,他们的家人和同事,研究人员以及组织的实际方式的理解,根据共同利益的不同定义,他们以不同的方式被呈现为主题。这种理论方法有可能为临床环境中的研究提供信息和支持,并指导资助机构评估产生临床和非临床结果的研究项目。可以开发一个适用世界定义结构的矩阵,以支持对不同目标和方法产生的研究成果进行比较。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Examining a Holistic Framework for Evaluating Clinical Outcomes in Parallel With Non-Clinical Outcomes

Examining a Holistic Framework for Evaluating Clinical Outcomes in Parallel With Non-Clinical Outcomes

Rationale

While clinical research seeks to evaluate outcomes of various types, no framework has been identified that permits a sufficiently broad approach to evaluating clinical outcomes, in parallel with non-clinical outcomes.

Aims and Objectives

The objective of this paper is to examine a unifying framework for evaluating clinical outcomes in parallel with non-clinical outcomes by drawing on different understandings of the Common Good. The proposed framework must have broad application, accounting for the various types of outcomes that may emerge within different disciplinary approaches and identifying the benefits or harms that might be experienced by the clinical research participants.

Method

Six different definitions of the Common Good originally described by Boltanski and Thévenot are presented. The six conceptions of the Common Good identify organising principles by which an outcome is evaluated as beneficial or harmful. It also identifies the various ways that the researched persons, and the researchers, are subjectified. Academic literature that reported outcomes for persons living with dementia was purposively sampled to demonstrate the application of the six definitions of the Common Good.

Results

A wide range of outcomes from clinical research may be evaluated in parallel, based upon the assumption that the Common Good may be expressed as a plurality of perceived goods extending beyond purely clinical, technically measured outcomes.

Further, the subjects of interventions may be described in non-clinical language, thus respecting the many roles that may be important to them as human persons and agents.

Conclusion

Boltanski and Thévenot's Economies of Worth framework allows research outcomes to be evaluated consistently against the six definitions of the Common Good. The definitions of the Common Good inhere six different Worlds: Civic, Domestic, Industry, Inspiration, Market and Opinion (or Celebrity). Each World is structured around a Higher Common Principle by which the Common Good is defined within that specific world.

The example of research amongst people living with dementia demonstrates the robustness of this framework by identifying a wide range of non-clinical outcomes. These extend the understanding of the practical ways in which participants, their families and associates, researchers, and also organisations, are variously presented as subjects according to the different definitions of the Common Good.

Implications

This theoretical approach has the potential to inform and support research in clinical settings and guide funding bodies in the evaluation of research projects that give rise to clinical and non-clinical outcomes.

A matrix that applies the structure of the definitions of the Worlds could be developed to support the comparison of research outcomes arising from diverse objectives and methodologies.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
4.20%
发文量
143
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice aims to promote the evaluation and development of clinical practice across medicine, nursing and the allied health professions. All aspects of health services research and public health policy analysis and debate are of interest to the Journal whether studied from a population-based or individual patient-centred perspective. Of particular interest to the Journal are submissions on all aspects of clinical effectiveness and efficiency including evidence-based medicine, clinical practice guidelines, clinical decision making, clinical services organisation, implementation and delivery, health economic evaluation, health process and outcome measurement and new or improved methods (conceptual and statistical) for systematic inquiry into clinical practice. Papers may take a classical quantitative or qualitative approach to investigation (or may utilise both techniques) or may take the form of learned essays, structured/systematic reviews and critiques.
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