Title of article
Literature describing environmental influences on human conception and gestation implies that the ratio of male to female live births should vary positively over time with the populationʹs ability to produce and distribute goods and services. No direct te
Author/Authors
Yvonne Villanueva-Russell، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
17
From page
545
To page
561
Abstract
Evidence-based medicine (EBM) has grown in popularity and prominence in the world of orthodox medicine since the 1980s. The focus of this article is on the process of developing practice guidelines (one type of EBM) and its effects upon chiropractic, a profession with a “philosophy, science and art” that is constructed upon divergent epistemological and methodological tenets (namely, the idea of “vitalism”). The EBM movement is conceptualized as part of a larger political economy surrounding the health care environment that creates a new set of imperatives for orthodox medicine, and also branches of alternative medicine that are in the process of professionalization. The quantitative, positivist and empiricist assumptions of EBM dictate which approaches to treatment and which clinical procedures are legitimate and perhaps reimbursable under systems of managed care. The ramifications of practice guidelines and its effects upon the intraprofessional segments of the chiropractic profession are also discussed.
Keywords
evidence-based medicine , Chiropractic , alternative medicine , Vitalism , USA , Professionalization
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Social Science and Medicine
Record number
602195
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