证据和意识形态作为俄罗斯光疗的基本原理:从苏联到现在。

Charlotte Kühlbrandt, Martin McKee
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在俄罗斯,光疗法仍被用于治疗一些常见疾病。这种做法牢牢扎根于历史:苏联的临床实践脱离了新兴的循证医学领域。医学研究人员与国际医学研究和科学文献隔绝,苏联的许多科学活动都是基于一种特定的社会主义意识形态。在本研究中,光疗的使用作为一个案例研究,探讨了国际循证医学与苏联时期孤立发展的实践之间的紧张关系,其遗产对今天的许多患者造成了损害。我们使用了四种不同的搜索方法来发现科学文献和灰色文献,包括历史文献和当代文献。我们评估了随时间变化的出版物频率,并将光疗与他汀类药物和止痛药等更正统的治疗方法的文献量进行了对比。我们的搜索发现越来越多和相对较大的俄语光治疗科学出版物,许多出版物来自著名的俄罗斯机构。结合我们对历史文献的分析和对22篇全文文章的评价,我们认为光疗在斯大林时期之前就进入了苏联的主流医疗实践,并且在当代俄罗斯的临床实践中仍然占有重要地位。我们认为,这种过时的治疗方法在俄罗斯幸存下来,部分原因在于苏联时期帮助普及这种方法的政治、经济和社会力量,以及执行不力的研究提供的看似正当的理由。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Evidence and ideology as a rationale for light-therapy in Russia: from the Soviet Union to the present day.

Evidence and ideology as a rationale for light-therapy in Russia: from the Soviet Union to the present day.

Light therapy is still used to treat a number of common diseases in Russia. The practice is firmly anchored in history: Soviet clinical practice was divorced from the emerging field of evidence-based medicine. Medical researchers were cut off from international medical research and scientific literature, with much Soviet scientific activity based on a particular socialist ideology. In this study, the use of light therapy serves as a case study to explore tensions between international evidence-based medicine and practices developed in isolation under the Soviet Union, the legacy of which is to the detriment of many patients today. We used four different search methods to uncover scientific and grey literature, both historical and contemporary. We assessed the changing frequency of publications over time and contrasted the volume of literature on light therapy with more orthodox treatments such as statins and painkillers. Our search found an increasing number and comparatively large body of scientific publications on light therapy in the Russian language, and many publications emanating from prestigious Russian institutions. Combined with our analysis of the historical literature and our appraisal of 22 full text articles, this leads us to suggest that light therapy entered mainstream Soviet medical practice before the Stalinist period and still occupies an important position in contemporary Russian clinical practice. We propose that this outdated treatment survives in Russia in part due to the political, economic and social forces that helped to popularize it during Soviet times, and by the seeming justification offered by poorly executed studies.

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