“Appears to Be a Reliable Informant”

Thomas Falasca, June 28, 2019, physician and author of Physician’s Guide to Better Medical Decision Making: Critical Thinking in Medicine

“Appears to be a reliable (unreliable) informant.” These are the words I have found distressingly absent from patient histories presented by medical students.

Medical students need to assess reliability because relative confidence in the available information is critical in medical decision making.

The same is true of physicians and scientists evaluating information in medical journals, although the readers of medical journals can assess the reliability of studies by consulting the conflict-of-interest disclosures by article authors.

Granted, it may be difficult to avoid some conflicts, but the litany of conflicts after some authors’ names is highly disturbing. When there are multiple methods in selecting subjects, defining interventions, choosing analyses, writing the report, and submitting for publication, there are manifold variables subject to manipulation, and readers may have neither the resources to evaluate them nor even all the relevant data. In situations of incomplete information or compromised evaluative resources, the element of trust looms large.

Regardless of an author’s other credentials, I think it unwise to attribute substantial credibility to authors with excessive conflicts of interest.

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