Title: Research in Obstetrics and Gynecology
1Researchin Obstetrics and Gynecology
- R.A. Pierson, MS PhD
- Professor, Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology
and Reproductive Sciences - College of Medicine
2The Problem
I dont know I dont really care about all
of this research stuff I just want to take
care of patients
Unnamed Ob-Gyn Resident III at OB-GYN Research
Day 2000
3The Solution
I cant think of a better way for you to care
for your patients than to do research!
Practicing clinician and part-time faculty
member OB-GYN Research Day 2000
4Training
- To guide or teach something as by subjecting to
various exercises or experiences - To guide or control toward a specific goal
- To do exercises that prepare for a specific
purpose - To improve or curb by subjecting to discipline
5Education
- The act or process of acquiring knowledge
- The knowledge or training acquired by this
process - The act or process of imparting knowledge
- The theory of teaching or learning
Education implies a continuous process !
6We need to blend these two concepts into a
coherent whole
- To improve patient care and quality of life
- Imparting the knowledge in our discipline to the
next generation - Evaluate the effectiveness of our therapies and
interventions - Apply new technologies to old problems
- Create and disseminate new knowledge
7An Obstetrical Case Study
- Queen Anne was the last Stuart monarch of Great
Britain. - In the last 17 years of the 17th Century, she was
pregnant 18 times. - Only 5 children were born alive, only 1 of them
survived infancy. - He died before reaching adulthood.
- There is no evidence of a genetic disorder
- Queen Anne had the best medical care money could
buy.
8What is Research ?
- Research is simply a process by which we answer a
question using a set of rules called the
scientific method.
9The Scientific Method
- Make an observation
- Formulate an hypothesis
- Design an experiment
- Execute the experiment
- Analyze the results
- Draw conclusion
- Formulate a new hypothesis
10Scientific Method
- In science, we may start with experimental
results, data, observations, measurements,
facts. - We invent a rich array of possible explanations
and systematically confront each explanation with
the facts. - We employ a baloney detection kit which is
brought out whenever new ideas are offered for
consideration. - If the idea survives examination by the tools in
our kit, we grant it warm, although tentative
acceptance.
11Critical Thinking
- The end result of learning the scientific method
- Should reduce biased assertion or uncritical
acceptance of ideas in the day to day practice of
obstetrics and gynecology
12- The fact that an opinion has been widely held is
no evidence whatsoever that it is not utterly
absurd. - Bertrand Russell
13What is Research ?
- Research is to see what everyone else has seen,
and to think what no one else has thought.
14What is Research ?
- Piersons Corollary
- If we knew what we were doing, they wouldnt
call it research!
15Hippocrates besides the oath
- Hippocrates of Cos introduced elements of the
scientific method into the diagnosis of disease
in the First Century BCE. - He stressed careful and meticulous observation.
- He recommended that physicians be able to tell,
from present symptoms alone, the probable past
and future course of each illness. - He was willing to admit the limitations of the
physicians knowledge.
16Hippocrates Teachings
Leave nothing to chance. Overlook nothing.
Combine contradictory observations. Allow
yourself enough time.
Hippocrates, 1 BCE
17Medicine in Classical Times
- Although considerable further advances in
medicine were made in classical times through the
fall of Rome. What followed in Europe was truly a
dark age. - Much knowledge of anatomy and surgery were lost.
Reliance on prayer and miraculous healing
abounded. Secular physicians became extinct. - Chants, potions, horoscopes and amulets were
widely used.
18Medicine in Classical Times
- Dissections of cadavers were restricted or
outlawed, so those who practiced medicine were
prevented from acquiring firsthand knowledge of
the human body. - Medical research and advancement of medical
knowledge came to a standstill. - Such is the fruit of Prohibitions.
19History of Medical Research
- In the revolution of ten centuries, not a single
discovery was made to exalt the dignity or
promote the happiness of mankind. Not a single
idea had been added to the speculative systems of
antiquity, and a succession of patient disciples
became in their turn the dogmatic teachers of the
next servile generation. -
- Edward Gibbon, History of the Eastern Empire,
-
20With this Papal Bull, Innocent initiated the
systematic accusation, torture and execution of
witches all over Europe. The Inquisition had
begun. Such is the value of authority.
21What is Science ?
- Science is more than a self-correcting body of
knowledge it is a way of thinking. - Science is far from a perfect instrument of
knowledge it is just the best that we have. - The scientific way of thinking is at once
imaginative and disciplined. - When we are self-indulgent and uncritical, when
we confuse hopes and facts, we slide into
pseudo-science and superstition
22Tenets of Evidence Based Medicine
Everyones clinical opinion counts equally,
regardless of rank or experience. We value
opinions only to the extent that they are
supported by scientific evidence, and not
according to the perceived prestige of the
proponent. When a clinical question arises, we
address it as a group through formal review
rather than by edict from the faculty. To suggest
that more experienced clinicians are inherently
better able to understand science strikes me as
elitist. Science abhors authoritarianism (and has
little use for age discrimination). With
increased age, we tend to expect increased
wisdom however, sometimes, the years bring only
a narrowing of the vision and a hardening of the
arteries. David Grimes, Evidence Based
Medicine, Obstetrics Gynecology 86(3) 1995
23What is Science ?
- It invites us to let the facts in, even when they
do not fit our preconceptions. - It counsels us to carry alternate hypotheses in
our heads and see which best fit the facts. - It urges us on a delicate balance between
no-holds-barred openness to new ideas, however,
heretical, and the most rigorous skeptical
scrutiny of everything - new ideas and
established wisdom. - This tool is essential for a democracy in an age
of change.
Carl Sagan, 1996
24Scientific Illiteracy
- Two recent surveys are interpreted to mean that
95 of the North American population is
scientifically illiterate. - We live in a time where the consequences of
scientific illiteracy are far more dangerous than
in any that has come before. - Real-life examples of scientific illiteracy in
OB-GYN - Blood letting in pre-eclampsia
- Twilight Sleep with no regard for the baby
25Science Precepts
- Every time a scientific paper presents data, it
is accompanied by an error bar - a quiet, but
insistent reminder that no knowledge is complete
or perfect. - The error bar is a calibration of how much we
trust what we think we know. - If the error bars are small, the accuracy of our
empirical knowledge is high if the error bars
are large, then so is the uncertainty of our
knowledge.
26Science Precepts
- Humans crave absolute certainty they may aspire
to it they may pretend to have achieved it but
the history of science tells us that the best
that we may hope for is successive improvement in
our knowledge. - We will always be mired in error. The most each
generation can hope for is to reduce the error
bars a little. - Skepticism is the prime tool in any explorers
toolkit, if not, we lose our way.
27Science Precepts
- One of the great commandments of Science is
Mistrust arguments from authority. - Authorities must prove their contentions, just
like everybody else. - There are no forbidden questions in science, no
matters too delicate or sensitive to be probed. - Openness to new ideas, combined with the most
rigorous, skeptical scrutiny of all ideas, sifts
the wheat from the chaff. It makes no difference
how smart, august or beloved you are.
28Science - Why do we put up with this?
- Do we like to be criticized?
- Every scientist/clinician feels a proprietary
affection for his or her ideas. - The hard rule is that if the ideas dont work,
you throw them away. Dont waste neurons on ideas
that dont work. - Devote those neurons to new ideas that better
explain the data. - Valid criticism does you a favour.
29- It is a capital mistake to theorize before one
has data. Insensibly, one begins to twist facts
to suit theories, instead of theories to suit
facts.
Sherlock Holmes in Arthur Conan Doyles A Scandal
in Bohemia, 1891
30The Tool Kit for Skeptical Thinking
- We will not learn much from mere contemplation.
- How do we decide among competing hypotheses?
- We let experiment do it.
- Control experiments are essential.
- Variables must be separated.
- Often, the experiment must be double blind so
that those hoping for a certain finding are not
in the compromising position of evaluating the
results.
31What should we do in OB-GYN?
- Be skeptical
- Question authority
- Make observations
- Live and work experimentally
- Draw rational conclusions
- Do not overstate your data
32Goals
- Open avenues for exploration of the human
condition - Well-designed framework within which to work
- Improve reproductive health care for Canadians
and the global community in all its many meanings - Understand the impact of our interventions
- On the children born
- On women and their families
- On future generations
33Goals for Obstetrics Gynecology (and ...ists)
- Foster an integrated research-clinical
medicine-community approach - To the creation of new knowledge
- To the provision of clinical services in womens
health care - To improving the human condition
34Truth or Consequences
- The consequences of a lack of research interest
among physicians are that health purveyors over
the conduct of research and making health policy. - e.g., HSURC in Saskatchewan has a goal of
curtailing clinical practice in some areas - If we do not do this ourselves, it will be done
for us
35Important Points to Be Considered
- Practice of medicine will change with completion
of the human genome project from a diagnosis and
treatment model to one of discovery, prevention
and management of disease. - We are on the leading edge of a wave of
incredible discoveries in Reproductive Science
Medicine. - Many of these discoveries will challenge some of
our most closely held beliefs.
36Important Points to Be Considered
- Reproductive Science Medicine have immense
medical and social implications - Enormous strides have been made in maternal
health and peri-natal care in the developed world - Reproduction remains a lottery
37An Eye to the Future.
- Priorities for Reproductive Science and Medicine
in the next century will be - to optimize safety of reproduction for mother,
father and child - to prevent diseases afflicting the reproductive
systems, - to overcome infertility in both sexes, and
- to address the numerous consequences of arrested
ovarian and testicular function with advancing
age
38How Has Our Understanding Changed?
39Where are We?
- Pills, potions and patches are ubiquitous in
Obstetrics Gynecology - The Pill has profoundly changed our concepts of
reproductive choice - New choices being developed monthly
- Information is what we try to give our patients
40Where Would We Be Without It ?
41Todays research is tomorrows medicine
42Reproductive Technology
- Simple to say.. More difficult to understand
- Has changed our notions of reproduction
- Progress is highly controversial
- ICSI
- IVM
- In vitro gestation
- Stem cells
- To Clone, or Not to Clone
- Etc.
- WOW.. What a future well have!