The democratic fallacy in matters of clinical opinion: Implications for analysing cause-of-death data

被引:7
作者
Byass P. [1 ]
机构
[1] Umeå Centre for Global Health Research, Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine, Umeå University
来源
Emerging Themes in Epidemiology | / 8卷 / 1期
关键词
Majority Opinion; Verbal Autopsy; Clinical Opinion; Public Health Conclusion; Blinded Assessor;
D O I
10.1186/1742-7622-8-1
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Arriving at a consensus between multiple clinical opinions concerning a particular case is a complex issue - and may give rise to manifestations of the democratic fallacy, whereby a majority opinion is misconstrued to represent some kind of "truth" and minority opinions are somehow "wrong". Procedures for handling multiple clinical opinions in epidemiological research are not well established, and care is needed to avoid logical errors. How to handle physicians' opinions on cause of death is one important domain of concern in this respect. Whether multiple opinions are a legal requirement, for example ahead of cremating a body, or used for supposedly greater rigour, for example in verbal autopsy interpretation, it is important to have a clear understanding of what unanimity or disagreement in findings might imply, and of how to aggregate case data accordingly. In many settings where multiple physicians have interpreted verbal autopsy material, an over-riding goal of arriving at a single cause of death per case has been applied. In many instances this desire to constrain findings to a single cause per case has led to methodologically awkward devices such as "TB/AIDS" as a single cause. This has also usually meant that no sense of disagreements or uncertainties at the case level is taken forward into aggregated data analyses, and in many cases an "indeterminate" cause may be recorded which actually reflects a lack of agreement rather than a lack of data on possible cause(s). In preparing verbal autopsy material for epidemiological analyses and public health interpretations, the possibility of multiple causes of death per case, and some sense of any disagreement or uncertainty encountered in interpretation at the case level, need to be captured and incorporated into overall findings, if evidence is not to be lost along the way. Similar considerations may apply in other epidemiological domains. © 2011 Byass; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 17 条
[1]  
Caplan J.P., Epstein L.A., Stern T.A., Consultants' conflicts: A case discussion of differences and their resolution, Psychosomatics, 49, pp. 8-13, (2008)
[2]  
Hunink M.G., In search of tools to aid logical thinking and communicating about medical decision making, Med Decis Making, 21, pp. 267-277, (2001)
[3]  
Caldwell K., Atwal A., Copp G., Brett-Richards M., Colemar K., Preparing for practice: How well are practitioners prepared for teamwork, Br J Nurs, 15, pp. 1250-1254, (2006)
[4]  
The Cremation (England and Wales) Regulations 2008, (2008)
[5]  
Baker R., Implications of Harold Shipman for general practice, Postgrad Med J, 80, pp. 303-306, (2004)
[6]  
Garenne M., Fauveau V., Potential and limits of verbal autopsies, Bull World Health Organ, 84, (2006)
[7]  
Baiden F., Bawah A., Biai S., Binka F., Boerma T., Byass P., Chandramohan D., Chatterji S., Engmann C., Dieltiens G., Jakob R., Kahn K., Kunii O., Lopez A., Murray C.J.L., Nahlen B., Rao C., Sankoh O., Setel P.W., Shibuya K., Soleman N., Yang G., Setting international standards for verbal autopsy, Bull World Health Organ, 85, pp. 570-571, (2007)
[8]  
Fantahun M., Fottrell E., Berhane Y., Wall S., Hogberg U., Byass P., Assessing a new approach to verbal autopsy interpretation in a rural Ethiopian community: The InterVA model, Bull World Health Organ, 84, pp. 204-210, (2006)
[9]  
Fottrell E., Byass P., Verbal Autopsy - Methods in transition, Epidemiologic Reviews, 32, pp. 38-55, (2010)
[10]  
Joshi R., Lopez A.D., MacMahon S., Reddy S., Dandona R., Dandona L., Neal B., Verbal autopsy coding: Are multiple coders better than one?, Bull World Health Organ, 87, pp. 51-57, (2009)