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Nick Black Department of Public Health and
Policy, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London WC1E 7HT nick.black@lshtm.ac.uk
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
The emergence of evidence based medicine in the early 1990s led to some clinicians challenging managers and policymakers to be equally evidence based in their policymaking. This demand was shared by some health policy analysts: "At a time when ministers are arguing that medicine should be evidence-based, is it not reasonable to suggest that this should also apply to health policy? If doctors are expected to base their decisions on the findings of research surely politicians should do the same . . . the case for evidence-based policymaking is difficult to refute."1
The need to be seen to be making evidence based decisions has
permeated all areas of British public policy. The government has
proclaimed the need for evidence based policing, and the 1998 strategic
defence review introduced evidence based defence.2 In the
health sector, the concept of evidence based policy has gained ground,
and a journal has been launched devoted to this
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