Entangled evidence: knowledge making in systematic reviews in healthcare.

As the volume of biomedical information escalates and its uses diversify, systematic reviews and meta-analyses - the compilation, selection and statistical analysis of pooled results from similar studies - are becoming an increasingly accepted method in the evaluation of healthcare technologies and interventions. We thus observe a proliferation of laboratories conducting this type of research. How is knowledge constructed in systematic reviews and meta-analysis in healthcare? Drawing on ethnographic data collected during 18 months of fieldwork in a research centre devoted to the development of evidence-based clinical-practice guidelines and systematic reviews, the paper argues that knowledge construction in secondary research in healthcare is structured upon a parallel process of disentanglement and qualification of data. In disentanglement, knowledge practices attempt to extricate data from the milieus in which they are commonly found (databases, texts, other research centres, etc.). In qualification, the focus of activities is on endowing data with new qualities - such as precision, unbiasness or 'fairness'- through the use of templates, graphical platforms and techno-political debates. The accomplishment of these two processes is fundamental to establishing the persuasive power that meta-analyses appear to have in contemporary healthcare politics.

[1]  M. Rawlins In pursuit of quality: the National Institute for Clinical Excellence , 1999, The Lancet.

[2]  T. Mckeown The Role of Medicine , 1979 .

[3]  Susan Leigh Star,et al.  Institutional Ecology, `Translations' and Boundary Objects: Amateurs and Professionals in Berkeley's Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, 1907-39 , 1989 .

[4]  A. Barry Political Machines: Governing a Technological Society , 2001 .

[5]  B. Latour,et al.  Laboratory Life: The Construction of Scientific Facts , 1979 .

[6]  Anselm L. Strauss,et al.  Basics of qualitative research : techniques and procedures for developing grounded theory , 1998 .

[7]  P. Strong Viewpoint: the academic encirclement of medicine? , 1984, Sociology of health & illness.

[8]  Stuart S. Blume,et al.  Technology Assessment and the Sociopolitics of Health Technologies , 2000, Journal of health politics, policy and law.

[9]  I. Chalmers Comparing like with like: some historical milestones in the evolution of methods to create unbiased comparison groups in therapeutic experiments. , 2001, International journal of epidemiology.

[10]  C. May Mobilising modern facts: health technology assessment and the politics of evidence. , 2006, Sociology of health & illness.

[11]  G. Schierhout,et al.  The private life of systematic reviews , 1997 .

[12]  S. Harrison THE POLITICS OF EVIDENCE-BASED MEDICINE IN THE UNITED KINGDOM , 1998 .

[13]  S. Tanenbaum,et al.  Knowing and acting in medical practice: the epistemological politics of outcomes research. , 1994, Journal of health politics, policy and law.

[14]  Michael Lynch,et al.  Discipline and the Material Form of Images: An Analysis of Scientific Visibility , 1985 .

[15]  Michel Callon,et al.  An Essay on Framing and Overflowing: Economic Externalities Revisited by Sociology , 1998 .

[16]  R. Peto,et al.  Beta blockade during and after myocardial infarction: an overview of the randomized trials. , 1985, Progress in cardiovascular diseases.

[17]  James C. Robinson,et al.  The corporate practice of medicine : competition and innovation in health care , 2001 .

[18]  D. Guston Boundary Organizations in Environmental Policy and Science: An Introduction , 2001 .

[19]  Douglas G. Altman,et al.  Systematic Reviews in Health Care: Meta-Analysis in Context: Second Edition , 2008 .

[20]  M. Callon Introduction: The Embeddedness of Economic Markets in Economics , 1998 .

[21]  Douglas G. Altman,et al.  Systematic Reviews in Health Care , 2001 .

[22]  David Bogen,et al.  The Spectacle of History: Speech, Text, and Memory at the Iran-Contra Hearings , 1998 .

[23]  K. K. Cetina Epistemic Cultures: How the Sciences Make Knowledge , 1999 .

[24]  D Light,et al.  The changing character of the medical profession: a theoretical overview. , 1988, The Milbank quarterly.

[25]  L. Hedges,et al.  A Brief History of Research Synthesis , 2002, Evaluation & the health professions.

[26]  T. Kaptchuk,et al.  Intentional Ignorance: A History of Blind Assessment and Placebo Controls in Medicine , 1998, Bulletin of the history of medicine.

[27]  S. Woolgar,et al.  The Manufacture of Knowledge: an Essay on the Constructivist and Contextual Nature of Science , 1982 .

[28]  Jack Katz,et al.  From How to Why , 2001 .

[29]  Tiago Moreira,et al.  Diversity in clinical guidelines: the role of repertoires of evaluation. , 2005, Social science & medicine.

[30]  C. Mulrow,et al.  Systematic Reviews: Rationale for systematic reviews , 1994, BMJ.

[31]  William A Ghali,et al.  The evolving paradigm of evidence-based medicine. , 2002, Journal of evaluation in clinical practice.

[32]  T. Dehue Testing treatments, managing life: on the history of randomized clinical trials: Harry M. Marks, The Progress of Experiment: Science and Therapeutic Reform in the United States, 1900-1990 , 1999 .

[33]  S. Shapin Pump and Circumstance: Robert Boyle's Literary Technology , 1984 .