Precision Medicine and Advancing Clinical Care: Insights From Iceland
Despite an emphasis on clinical practice guidelines based on evidence from randomized clinical trials, medicine in many ways remains an inexact science. The limits of evidence-based medicine are apparent, including knowledge gaps from lack of high-quality clinical data. Moreover, the "one size...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Archives of internal medicine (1960) 2019-02, Vol.179 (2), p.139-140 |
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container_title | Archives of internal medicine (1960) |
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creator | Arnar, David O Palsson, Runolfur |
description | Despite an emphasis on clinical practice guidelines based on evidence from randomized clinical trials, medicine in many ways remains an inexact science. The limits of evidence-based medicine are apparent, including knowledge gaps from lack of high-quality clinical data. Moreover, the "one size fits all" strategy, designed for the average patient, is hampered by the biological variability that leads to heterogeneity in disease expression. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1001/jamainternmed.2018.6729 |
format | Article |
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source | MEDLINE; American Medical Association Journals |
subjects | Clinical medicine Clinical trials Evidence-based medicine General Practitioners - organization & administration Humans Iceland Point-of-Care Testing - standards Precision medicine Precision Medicine - standards Primary Health Care - standards |
title | Precision Medicine and Advancing Clinical Care: Insights From Iceland |
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