Foundations of medical diagnosis: What actually are the parameters involved in Bayes' theorem?
- 15 February 1994
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Statistics in Medicine
- Vol. 13 (3) , 201-209
- https://doi.org/10.1002/sim.4780130302
Abstract
Three decades ago, the thesis was adduced that setting diagnostic probabilities requires, by the inherent nature of diagnosis-pertinent medical knowledge, the use of Bayes' theorem. That paper was both vague and inconsistent in its delineation of the nature of the parameters involved in this formulation, and subsequent authors have only added to the confusion. Nevertheless, that thesis has been, and continues to be, enthusiastically embraced by clinical scholars. We here posit what those parameters must be taken to represent in principle; and this explication reveals that their quantification poses generally unsurmountable epistemologic challenges. The implication of this is not that informed setting of diagnostic probabilities is generally infeasible. Our conclusion is, instead, that the seminal thesis was founded on an untenable pair of premises about the nature of scientifically attainable knowledge pertinent to diagnosis.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Clearing "Haze"Medical Decision Making, 1991
- Reliability of bayesian probability analysis for predicting coronary artery disease in a veterans hospitalJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1987
- Graphic and Tabular Expressions of Bayes' TheoremMedical Decision Making, 1987
- A Citation Analysis of the Field of Medical Decision Making, 1959-1982Medical Decision Making, 1984
- The Declining Specificity of Exercise Radionuclide VentriculographyNew England Journal of Medicine, 1983
- Predictive value of SS-B precipitating antibodies in Sjoogren's syndrome.BMJ, 1982
- Diagnosis by Logistic Discriminant Function: Further Practical Problems and ResultsJournal of the Royal Statistical Society Series C: Applied Statistics, 1974
- Separate sample logistic discriminationBiometrika, 1972
- Reasoning Foundations of Medical DiagnosisScience, 1959