Back to the clinic. Methods II. the architecture of clinical research. subject interaction, maneuvers and disease throughout time

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Abstract

Medicine is characterized by the application of the scientific method through clinical judgment, by correct interpretation and use of the clinical course and/or natural history of the disease; its best description is observed in the architecture of clinical research. Through a temporal sequence, this model explains the phenomenon of causality with three sections: baseline status, maneuver, and outcome. The baseline status assesses who the patient is, where does he come from, his general conditions, the diagnosis, stage and aggressiveness of the pathology, complications, previous therapies, socioeconomic-cultural level, habits, therapeutic indications or contraindications, and the expected evolution is anticipated. In the maneuver, risk or prognostic factors, specific or symptomatic treatment, and general measures can be evaluated. In the outcome, early and late evolution are monitored. The model also allows the causes of follow-up loss to be determined. Anticipating patient evolution by recognizing his condition, disease, and expected effect of medical decisions allows acting in advance, since waiting for the manifestations of the evolutionary process of disease results in detriment to the patient.

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Talavera, J. O., Roy-García, I. A., Pérez-Rodríguez, M., Palacios-Cruz, L., & Rivas-Ruíz, R. (2020). Back to the clinic. Methods II. the architecture of clinical research. subject interaction, maneuvers and disease throughout time. Gaceta Medica de Mexico. Academia Nacional de Medicina. https://doi.org/10.24875/GMM.M20000433

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