Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-27T16:05:06.478Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

“Nobody ever expects the Spanish Inquisition” (Python, 1991)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

C. Adams
Affiliation:
Cochrane Schizophrenia Group, Summertown Pavilion, Middle Way, Summertown, Oxford OX2 7LG
S. Gilbody
Affiliation:
Cochrane Schizophrenia Group and NHS Centre for Reviews and Dissemination, University of York, York YO1 5DD
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

Guidelines are systematically developed statements designed to help practitioners and patients make decisions about appropriate health care for specific circumstances (Jackson & Feder, 1998). ‘Help’ is an important word. Guidelines/guides, in most instances, may suggest a road to take in order to travel from A to B, and make explicit why those suggestions have been made. Provision of this information respects the traveller's ability to assimilate the information, and make decisions on applicability. The traveller is then not constrained by information but helped by it. At the end of the day, for clear reasons, a different road may be chosen.

Type
Opinion & Debate
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © 2001. The Royal College of Psychiatrists

Guidelines are systematically developed statements designed to help practitioners and patients make decisions about appropriate health care for specific circumstances (Reference Jackson and FederJackson & Feder, 1998). ‘Help’ is an important word. Guidelines/guides, in most instances, may suggest a road to take in order to travel from A to B, and make explicit why those suggestions have been made. Provision of this information respects the traveller's ability to assimilate the information, and make decisions on applicability. The traveller is then not constrained by information but helped by it. At the end of the day, for clear reasons, a different road may be chosen.

Should guidelines be used unthinkingly to dictate practice, then the worst fears of both those with antipathy to evidence-based medicine (EBM), and those who support EBM are realised. Practitioners hostile to their perceived impressions of evidence-based practice will see inappropriately constructed or implemented guidelines as constraining of clinical freedom, often drawn up by those losing touch with ‘real world’ medicine and cries of ‘dictation by numbers’ will be heard throughout the land (Reference Grahame-SmithGrahame-Smith, 1995). On the other hand, the accusation of ‘dictation by numbers’ — justified if guidelines are used as stipulations for practice — will also disturb those who wished EBM to be the “conscientious, explicit and judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients” (Reference Sackett, Rosenberg and GraySackett et al, 1996).

Readers of guidelines should make up their own minds whether guidelines “made explicit identification of the major decisions, relevant to patients… and the possible consequences of these decisions” (Reference Jackson and FederJackson & Feder, 1998). The same authors go on to describe the second component of successful guidelines, which “involves bringing together the relevant, valid evidence that clinicians need to make informed decisions at each of the key decision points” and the third as “the presentation of evidence and recommendations in a concise, accessible format” (Reference Jackson and FederJackson & Feder, 1998).

UK psychiatrists can expect to hear a lot more about guidelines in the near future since, for example, the National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) has been charged with either producing or giving its seal of approval to externally produced guidelines (Secretary of State for Health, 1998). Similarly, we await the publication of important evidence-based guidelines commissioned by the Royal College of Psychiatrists (2001), which may or may not form the basis of guidance issued by NICE.

The task of producing guidelines that are relevant, valid and useful to clinicians in making informed decisions will be, at best, challenging. Most of the randomised knowledge-base in psychiatry consists of trials, produced or funded by the pharmaceutical industry, and designed to meet licensing requirements, rather than the needs of UK clinicians. Difficulties begin when extrapolating these data to the real world, because patients whom we would recognise from our own practices would never make it into these trials owing to exhaustive exclusion criteria. Difficulties continue when we find that the success or otherwise of treatment has been judged using complex rating scales that are never used in the real world, and the results of which are difficult to interpret. The situation might be improved if trialists asked simple questions, such as whether patients feel any better, or recorded whether a drug kept patients out of hospital or in housing or out of trouble with the police. Finally, we are forced to make a leap of faith when judging the results of such research, when most studies of, for example, newer anti-schizophrenia drugs, lose between 30% and 50% of their participants over the 6-week duration of the research (Reference Thornley and AdamsThornley & Adams, 1998; Adams & NHS Centre for Reviews and Disseminations, 1999). Trialists commonly assume that those who leave studies before completion remain stable. This may be true, but it seems unlikely, and the consequence, or validity, of this assumption is difficult, or impossible to test. This is especially the case when continuous measures (mostly scale-derived) are presented in preference to dichotomous (better/not better, yes/no) outcomes.

The research that might form the evidence-base of truly valid and relevant guidelines has yet to be conducted, and is unlikely to be conducted until real world evidence or clinical and cost-effectiveness (not just efficacy) is demanded by drug licensing bodies. Summarising evidence and transforming it into guidelines is a necessary but insufficient first step in influencing clinical practice (the ultimate aim of any guideline). Recent research suggests that well-constructed guidelines in the sphere of mental health are best ignored, even when accompanied by quite complex and well thought out implementation strategies (Reference Thompson, Kinmonth and StevensThompson et al, 2000).

The nightmare of edicts from on high, making more of evidence than is justified, and being ignored, was cleverly parodied by the most august Nigel Molesworth writing in the British Medical Journal (Reference MolesworthMolesworth, 1998):

“Some say all EBM-ers are arrogant, controvershal and seducitve. Others say they are parasites and alkemists. Also many hav beards (my observashun). This is called evidence. Others say: we do not lik all this meat analysis, giv us more bad old reviews the wors the better.”

Molesworth continues,

“EBM doctor then cry ‘but you must follow guidlines’ and non-EBM doctor pull out guidline written on parchmint, blow off dust and read out loud: ‘This license the bearer to do what he or she likes, singed, Samule Peeps’.” (Reference MolesworthMolesworth, 1998)

It would be a shame if guidelines produced from limited and largely irrelevant data were to cause clinicians to retreat to parchment-based medicine and away from the “conscientious, explicit and judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients” (Reference Sackett, Rosenberg and GraySackett et al, 1996).

Acknowledgement

Drew Davey for helping with the Monty Python quote that forms the title of this paper.

References

ADAMS, C. & NHS Centre for Reviews And Disseminations (1999) Drug treatments for schizophrenia. Effective Health Care Bulletin, 5, No 6.Google Scholar
Grahame-Smith, D. (1995) Evidence based medicine: Socratic dissent. BMJ, 310, 11261127.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jackson, R. & Feder, G. (1998) Guidelines for clinical guidelines. BMJ, 317, 427428.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Molesworth, N. (1998) Down with EBM! British Medical Journal, 317, 17201721.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Python, M. (1991) Monty Python's Big Red Book. Dublin: Mandarin.Google Scholar
Royal College of Psychiatrists (2001) Management of Schizophrenia, Part I: Pharmacological Treatments. Occasional Paper OP51. London: Royal College of Psychiatrists, in press.Google Scholar
Sackett, D. L., Rosenberg, W. M., Gray, J. A., et al (1996) Evidence based medicine: what it is and what it isn't. BMJ, 312, 7172.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Secretary of State for Health (1998) A First Class Service: Quality in the New National Health Service. London: HMSO.Google Scholar
Thompson, C., Kinmonth, A. L., Stevens, L., et al (2000) Effects of a clinical-practice guideline and practice-based education on detection and outcome of depression in primary care: Hampshire Depression Project randomised controlled trial. Lancet, 355, 185191.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Thornley, B. & Adams, C. E. (1998) Content and quality of 2000 controlled trials in schizophrenia over 50 years. BMJ, 317, 11811184.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.