By Michael J. Critelli | MakeUsWell Newsletter,
For all of the advances in medicine, nutrition science, and artificial intelligence, one of the most poorly understood conflicts in health remains the tension between what is “evidence-based” and what is “personalized.”
We often speak as if they are the same thing. They are not.
Governments regulate medicine, medical devices, foods, and beverages largely on the basis of evidence generated through research. In medicine, the gold standard is the randomized clinical trial: carefully designed studies that isolate the effects of a drug, therapy, device, or procedure and compare outcomes against a control group. The goal of both the randomized clinical trials and “evidence-based medicine” is to assess the effects of whatever is being tested with respect to a large population.
This framework has saved millions of lives.
But the best evidence is never as certain as we want it to be. It never completely enables us to assess the complete effects on every individual.