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Dr. Coates is a veterinarian based in the other “Sunshine State” – that's Colorado to the rest of you – where she lives and plays with a varied range of animals. She shares her professional and personal experiences, Monday through Friday, here on petMD's blog, the Fully Vetted. Log in for your daily dose of her insight and wisdom.

The Pros and Cons of Evidence-Based Medicine

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November 08, 2012 / (2) comments

I have a thing for science and learning about how things work – it’s one of the reasons I became a veterinarian. I considered becoming a research scientist, but the more I dabbled in the field, the more I realized I liked “big picture” science rather than delving ever more deeply into a relatively narrow field.

 

Clinical practice is definitely “big picture.” Doctors routinely have to collect data from many different sources (history taking, a physical exam, laboratory tests, etc.) and come up with an explanation for and practical way to deal with a patient’s problems. Add to this already complicated situation the fact that our information is typically not complete and/or the results we have seem to contradict one another and you can see why medicine is sometimes described as an art rather than a science.

Some veterinarians don’t like this “art” aspect of medicine, though. A movement is afoot that encourages doctors to base their recommendations on the results of scientific research – so-called evidence based medicine. You are probably thinking, “Of course doctors should base their recommendations on science. Isn’t that what they already do?” Yes, when the scientific evidence exists, that’s exactly what most of us do. But as I mentioned above, we’re often in the position of having to make decisions about a particular case based on ambiguous information.

Veterinary medical research is not particularly well-funded. There’s a lot more money to be had on the human side of things (that system is far from perfect also), so it shouldn’t come as too big of a surprise that veterinarians have to get creative. We routinely use medications “off-label,” meaning to treat a disease or in a species for which they haven’t been approved. Just because something seems to work in a person or in a dog doesn’t mean it’s going to work (or even be safe) in a cat, but sometimes that’s all we have to go on.

We don’t fly completely blind in these situations. We have an understanding of the physiology of the disease and species in question, and we’ll look for case reports describing times when someone else has tried something similar and had success, but at some point you often just have to make your best educated guess and go with it. This scenario is obviously not ideal. Sometimes we’ll think, “Hey, that seemed to work well” and continue using a new therapy when any improvements we observe are simply a result of the placebo effect or something called “regression to the mean” (we tend to seek medical care when symptoms are especially bad and then credit treatment for improvement when it could just be normal variation over time).

I am a believer in evidence-based medicine, when the evidence is available. However, I can’t exactly wait for the perfect meta-analysis when faced with a sick patient on my exam room table. When the evidence is lacking and a patient is suffering, I simply have to fall back on my own experiences and those of other clinicians I trust and hope the science catches up later.

 

 

Dr. Jennifer Coates

 

 

Image: kurhan / via Shutterstock

 

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COMMENTS (2)
1
Studies
by TheOldBroad on 11/08/2012 07:01am

The Morris Foundation funds animal health studies and appears to do a good job.

I believe they are currently funding research concerning stem cells.

2
Vet's Bag of Tricks
by Rod Russell on 11/08/2012 08:42am

Obviously, companion animal vets are at a disadvantage because their patients cannot talk. So that source of information ("Where does it hurt? How do you feel?") is denied to those vets. But, there are alternative sources of information that most vets do not use. Pulsing, for instance, can provide very helpful data about issues with internal organs, which very few vets have even studied. For instance, pulsing can detect liver problems long before they show up in blood panels. By the time the blood evidences a liver issue, up to 70% of the liver already is inoperative.

But one of my main complaints about most vets (apart from their seemingly intentional ignorance about nutrition and vaccinations) is that, when they don't know what is wrong with the pet, they usually give an antibiotic and/or a steroid. Antibiotics and steroids are not like water. For sure, when the pet's immune system needs all the help it can get, these two devices suppress it.

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About fully vetted

Jennifer Coates, DVM

Photo of Dr Coates

Image credit: Jim Piraino

...graduated with honors from the Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine in 1999. In the years since, she has practiced veterinary medicine in Virginia, Wyoming, and Colorado. She is the author of several books about veterinary medicine and animal care, including the Dictionary of Veterinary Terms: Vet-Speak Deciphered for the Non-Veterinarian. Dr. Coates also writes short stories that focus on the strength and importance of the human-animal bond, and freelance articles relating to a variety of animal care and veterinary topics. Dr. Coates lives in Fort Collins, Colorado with her husband, daughter, and various species of pets.

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