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So-Called “Clinical Equipoise” and the Argument from Design 

Author: Fred Gifford a
Affiliation:   a Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan, USA
DOI: 10.1080/03605310701255743
Publication Frequency: 6 issues per year
Published in: journal Journal of Medicine and Philosophy, Volume 32, Issue 2 March 2007 , pages 135 - 150
Formats available: HTML (English) : PDF (English)
You have: FREE ACCESS FREE ACCESS

The circumstances under which this title is published have changed:

Reason for change: Changed Publisher
Now published by: Oxford University Press
Date of change: 2008



Abstract

In this article, I review and expand upon arguments showing that Freedman's so-called “clinical equipoise” criterion cannot serve as an appropriate guide and justification for the moral legitimacy of carrying out randomized clinical trials. At the same time, I try to explain why this approach has been given so much credence despite compelling arguments against it, including the fact that Freedman's original discussion framed the issues in a misleading way, making certain things invisible: Clinical equipoise is conflated with community equipoise, and several versions of each are also conflated. But a misleading impression is given that, rather than distinct criteria being arbitrarily conflated, a puzzle is solved and a number of features unified. Various issues are pushed under the rug, hiding flaws of the “clinical equipoise” approach and thus deceiving us into thinking that we have a solution when we do not. Particularly significant is the ignoring of the crucial distinction between the individual patient decision and the policy decision.
Keywords: clinical equipoise; community equipoise; individual equipoise; randomized clinical trial; theoretical equipoise
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