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  Vol. 271 No. 11, March 16, 1994 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Guidelines You Can Follow and Can Trust

An Ideal and an Example

Clement J. McDonald, MD; J. Marc Overhage, MD, PhD

JAMA. 1994;271(11):872-873.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

Guidelines are popular these days. They are mentioned in journal articles,1-3 editorials,4 insurance company contracts, and federal legislation. The Institute of Medicine has dedicated two reports to the subject.5,6

Unfortunately, the word guideline covers a broad spectrum of intellectual products. Some are hard to follow. They use weasel words instead of numeric thresholds or explicit criteria at their decision points and do not really tell you what to do. We say these are not decidable. Drug package inserts are notorious: "Serum electrolytes (particularly potassium), CO2, creatinine and BUN should be determined frequently during the first few months of Lasix therapy and periodically thereafter."7 Guidelines for isoniazid prophylaxis, in contrast, are explicit and easy to follow.8

Some are simple, describing the indications for a single action and requiring access to only a few variables for their execution. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

From the Department of Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine and the Regenstrief Institute for Health Care, Indianapolis.


Footnotes

Reprint requests to Regenstrief Institute, 5th Floor RHC, 1001 W 10th St, Indianapolis, IN 46202 (Dr McDonald).



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