| Making Informed Decisions |
Gathering information, thinking about options and knowing what it is you value, will help you make decisions that are appropriate for you. When it comes to your health and wellbeing, talking with your health practitioner can assist you in making an informed decision.
Choosing a health practitionerDeveloping a partnership with your health practitioner will depend on a level of trust that insists on:
While it may take time and effort to establish this partnership, in the end it will be in your best interests to choose carefully. When choosing a health practitioner you could take into account:
Why evidence mattersInformation about health can be obtained from a variety of sources: family, friends, the media and healthcare professionals. With the advent of the World Wide Web, information is available more readily, making it increasingly hard to judge competing claims. The task is even harder when health claims are made with the underlying purpose of promoting a particular product.
Interpreting clinical trialsIt is more difficult than you would expect to prove that a particular treatment prevented something from happening, or relieved a particular condition. The results from using a particular treatment should be better than no treatment at all or using something that is already known to be helpful. Remember there are all kinds of reasons why people recover or do not get sick (such as spontaneous remission and 'strong' genes).
A good example of an RCT is the Women’s Health Initiative study in the US. (For more information about this study see Women's Health Initiative. Using the tools provided here, along with trusted sources of information, can help you make decisions that are right for you. Further resources
Smart Health Choices: Making Sense of Health Advice
Content updated June 18, 2008 |
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