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      Health technology and credibility

      editorial
      1 , , 2 , 3
      Critical Care
      BioMed Central

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          Abstract

          A new health technology assessment section is to start in Critical Care. The use of new technology is germane to critical care medicine [1]. Consequently, intensivists are obliged to critically appraise the technology in use. There are already publicly funded bodies performing the task of sifting through development data on these innovations, so what could be new about technology assessment? Our purpose is to perform the assessment with a different emphasis – to compare the experience of developer and clinician and to inform the working intensivist regarding the usefulness of a new technology. Credibility is of prime concern, in an area where marketing materials generally include some bias. In addition, the traditional clinician's perspective is not without its own uncertainties, covering a spectrum from unbiased yet inexperienced to experienced but partisan with industry. So how can we truly assess technology in a way that is practically relevant and reliable? The format of the forthcoming technology assessments will be pairs of articles: a set questionnaire answered by the developer alongside a reflective assessment written by an expert chosen for their independence. This choice of expert is one of the features of this new venture. We hope that by careful choice of reviewer we will retain the reader's trust and support clinical decision-making. The selection of experts will probably involve recruiting new clinicians who are less tarnished by the tensions of research and industry funding. This will sometimes mean avoiding the usual giants of our field. In so doing, however, we hope to remain true to the original agenda. This extends to the Journal's choice of editorial team for the section. We would consider ourselves free from professional conflict. As an additional aid to keeping abreast of the rapid evolution of technology, we will be running a regular item on innovations. The first of these appears in this edition. This will attempt to introduce novel technologies or important advances in technologies that are already established. Competing interests None declared.

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          Ethics and critical care in the new millennium

          Attempts to improve survival demand that intensivists practice at the forefront of technology. In the present millennium, ethical challenges will arise during the development and use of emerging therapeutics, and when helping patients and families to decide how these tools should be used in the context of individual and societal goals, values and beliefs. The future of critical care depends on our abilities to think critically through the ethical challenges posed by the exciting therapeutics that draw us to the field. In the coming months, Critical Care Forum will explore the ethical issues that so profoundly affect our ability to provide meaningful health care.
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            Author and article information

            Journal
            Crit Care
            Critical Care
            BioMed Central (London )
            1364-8535
            1466-609X
            2004
            5 March 2004
            : 8
            : 2
            : 73
            Affiliations
            [1 ]Assistant Professor, University of Toronto, Sunnybrook and Women's College Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
            [2 ]Specialist, Intensive Care Services, Royal Prince Alfred Hospital, Camperdown, New South Wales, Australia
            [3 ]Consultant in Intensive Care Medicine and Anaesthesia, Northwick Park & St Marks Hospitals, Harrow, UK
            Article
            cc2842
            420049
            abf8568c-ab62-4b6d-ac35-d771180389c5
            Copyright © 2004 BioMed Central Ltd
            History
            Categories
            Editorial

            Emergency medicine & Trauma
            Emergency medicine & Trauma

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