Rapid and llving guidance for COVID-19 [Editorial]
Ann. intern. med; 174 (8), 2021
Année de publication: 2021
The COVID-19 pandemic is stress testing our evidence
systems. The tremendous output of COVID-19
research and the need for clinicians and other decision
makers to have trusted, up-to-date sources of evidence
and guidance during a time of great uncertainty have highlighted the limitations of conventional approaches. The
pandemic has been a reminder that too often our decisions
are informed either by guidance developed using rigorous
scientific methods or by sources that are up to date with
the latest research—but not both. Seldom do we find sources that are an accurate reflection of research knowledge
by being both methodologically rigorous and current.
Although the COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted
many of the flaws in our evidence systems, it has also shown
the value of novel approaches, including in examples where
the rigor or currency tradeoff has been broken. Qaseem
and colleagues at the American College of Physicians (ACP)
responded to the urgent need for guidance during the pandemic by producing living, rapid practice points. They
report their methods in this issue of Annals (2).
The ACP team followed conventional processes for
the development of recommendations, with 2 important
modifications. First, their initial development was accelerated using methods for rapid reviews and recommendations. Second, these practice points are being maintained
in a living, frequently updated state to incorporate new
research as it becomes available.