1990
DOI: 10.1001/jama.264.13.1737
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Clinical decision making: from theory to practice. Connecting value and costs. Whom do we ask, and what do we ask them?

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Cited by 27 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…23,24 Ge nel ola rak tıb bi te da vi de ka rar ver me sü reci iki aşa ma lı dır. 25 Bi lim sel bil gi nin de ğer len di ril -Atıcı ve ark. Tıp Tarihi ve Etik di ği ilk aşa ma da ben zer has ta po pü las yo nun da öz -gün uy gu la ma so nuç la rı göz önün de bu lun du ru lur.…”
Section: Discussionunclassified
“…23,24 Ge nel ola rak tıb bi te da vi de ka rar ver me sü reci iki aşa ma lı dır. 25 Bi lim sel bil gi nin de ğer len di ril -Atıcı ve ark. Tıp Tarihi ve Etik di ği ilk aşa ma da ben zer has ta po pü las yo nun da öz -gün uy gu la ma so nuç la rı göz önün de bu lun du ru lur.…”
Section: Discussionunclassified
“…1,[8][9][10][11][12] Thus, we assessed patients' preferences for surveillance, treatment, and information.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…And because qualityof-life assessments are inherently subjective, who better make such value judgments than the patients themselves? 18,19 Key differences between pay-for-performance and evidencebased reimbursement are summarized in Table 1. Unlike current pay-for-performance proposals, for which there is little direct evidence of effectiveness, 20 these evidence-based reimbursement incentives (1) focus on the expectation of benefit rather than actual outcome, (2) use empirical data rather than expert consensus opinion, (3) apply to individual point-of-service encounters rather than remote group averages, and (4) are relatively large in size and immediate in impact.…”
Section: Evidence-based Reimbursement Versus Pay For Performancementioning
confidence: 99%