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A hierarchy of evidence is a ranking of the quality of evidence used in evidence-based medicine. There is variation among hierarchies, with more than 80 documented,[1] but they follow a basic pattern of attempting to rank evidence based on:
The Canadian Task Force on the Periodic Health Examination first described an explicit hierarchy of evidence in 1979.[1][5][6] Implicit hierarchies of evidence can be inferred from literature reviews that predate 1979, however, such as the monograph series of the International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) that began in 1972.[7]
A generally-accepted hierarchy of evidence is:[2][8]
IARC Monographs, particularly the more recent ones, use a hierarchy that resembles the following, where evidence at the bottom can be used to support evidence at the top for overall evaluations:[7]
“”Hierarchies are a poor basis for the application of evidence in clinical practice. The Evidence-Based Medicine movement should move beyond them and explore alternative tools for appraising the overall evidence for therapeutic claims.
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—Christopher J. Blunt[9] |
Hierarchies of evidence are not without criticism, but the criticism has come from within the philosophy of science and has generally been ignored within evidence-based medicine.[10]
Problems with evidence hierarchies include:[9][11]
Although there are serious criticisms of the hierarchy of evidence in evidence-based medicine, there has been no serious proposal for replacing this type of methodology in dealing with prioritization of the sometimes massive amounts of evidence relevant to a given problem.