Non-Clinical Benefits of Evidence-Based Veterinary Medicine
a Knowledge Summary by
Sarah Hauser BSc (Hons) MPA MPP1*
Elizabeth L. Jackson BAg (Hons) MBA PhD SFHEA1
1Royal Veterinary College, 4 Royal College St, London NW1 0TU
*Corresponding Author (shauser@rvc.ac.uk)
Vol 1, Issue 3 (2016)
Published: 22 Aug 2016
Reviewed by: Dr Sebastian Arlt
Next Review date: 20 Aug 2018
DOI: 10.18849/VE.V1I3.34
Question
Does the adoption of EBVM by UK veterinary practices (versus the non-adoption) provide commercial benefits?
Summary of the evidence
Population: | Veterinarians (who work in the French-speaking part of Belgium) |
Sample size: | 201 Veterinarians n=201 |
Intervention details: | Telephone survey and semi-structured face-to-face interviews |
Study design: | Qualitative data analysis |
Outcome Studied: | Objective assessment of veterinary practitioners’ clinical decision making |
Main Findings (relevant to PICO question): |
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Limitations: | Based on a small population, findings may not apply outside the French speaking part of Belgium |
Population: | Veterinarians |
Sample size: | 21 veterinarians from seven veterinary first opinion practices n=21 |
Intervention details: | Semi-structured interviews |
Study design: | Qualitative data analysis: Thematic analysis using qualitative data analysis software (NVivo) |
Outcome Studied: |
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Main Findings (relevant to PICO question): |
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Limitations: | Very small sample size |
Population: | NA |
Sample size: | NA |
Intervention details: | NA |
Study design: | Ideas, editorials, expert opinion |
Outcome Studied: |
|
Main Findings (relevant to PICO question): |
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Limitations: | Ideas and expert opinion. Topics not empirically tested |
Population: | NA |
Sample size: | NA |
Intervention details: | NA |
Study design: | Ideas, editorials, expert opinion |
Outcome Studied: | Clinical governance provides a framework to help improve standards of care |
Main Findings (relevant to PICO question): |
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Limitations: | Ideas and expert opinion. Topics not empirically tested |
Population: | NA |
Sample size: | NA |
Intervention details: | NA |
Study design: | Series of commentaries on evidence-based medicine in equine medicine |
Outcome Studied: | Objective assessment of the factors influencing good clinical decision making. |
Main Findings (relevant to PICO question): |
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Limitations: | Ideas and expert opinion. Topics not empirically tested |
Population: | NA |
Sample size: | NA |
Intervention details: | NA |
Study design: | Ideas, editorials, expert opinion |
Outcome Studied: | Description of how problem-oriented veterinary medicine can help veterinarians refine case information into a diagnosis, satisfy the concerns of their clients, and provide the best possible quality of life for their exotic companion animal patients. |
Main Findings (relevant to PICO question): |
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Limitations: | The author suggests that a problem oriented approach is good for veterinary business, but does not base this on evidence. |
Population: | NA |
Sample size: | NA |
Intervention details: | NA |
Study design: | Ideas, editorials, expert opinion |
Outcome Studied: | EBVM is the conscientious, explicit, and judicious use of the current best evidence in making decisions about the care of individual patients |
Main Findings (relevant to PICO question): |
|
Limitations: | Topics not empirically tested |
Population: | NA |
Sample size: | NA |
Intervention details: | NA |
Study design: | Ideas, editorials, expert opinion |
Outcome Studied: | Evidence-based veterinary medicine holds the promise of providing the best standard of care for animal patients |
Main Findings (relevant to PICO question): |
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Limitations: | Topics not empirically tested. There is no direct link between EBVM and commercial benefits to veterinarians, but the paper does highlight that each client’s ability to pay is factored into a veterinarian’s decision making |
Population: | NA |
Sample size: | NA |
Intervention details: | NA |
Study design: | Ideas, editorials, expert opinion |
Outcome Studied: | The process of implementing EBVM in small animal practice |
Main Findings (relevant to PICO question): |
|
Limitations: | NA |
Appraisal, application and reflection
Little research exists on the commercial benefits of EBVM. While the clinical benefits have been fairly well documented, the business aspect of evidence-based veterinary medicine has not. Two types of papers were included in this knowledge summary. Firstly, non-empirical papers highlighting the perceived connection between EBVM and better business performance. Secondly, empirical research that assesses veterinary practitioners’ decision making with regards to commercial benefits of EBVM. Despite the specificity of the search terms, the search strategy was dominated by results that focused on specific clinical benefits of EBVM and did not touch on any financial or other commercial benefits.
This knowledge summary specifically focuses on financial, commercial and business impacts of EBVM on the individual business. While financial benefits only include monetary aspects such as profit and loss of a practice, business and commercial benefits include a wider spectrum of benefits such as client satisfaction, client retention and reputation. These benefits are often intangible and difficult to measure but can have a major impact on the success of a business. Wider economic benefits, that include potential impacts on the entire economy, such as a decrease in disease outbreaks due to better veterinary practice, are outside the scope of this study.
The methodologies used to research veterinary practitioners’ decision making include inductive approaches whereby conclusions were drawn from thematic coding of face-to-face interviews and telephone surveys (Vandeweerd et al 2012; Mateus et al 2014). Some of the published research also consists of literature reviews, published commentaries and expert opinion on the topic and therefore offer opportunities for further exploration, rather than definitive conclusions based on empirical research. While these papers are not based on empirical research, they highlight an existing awareness of the potential business benefits of EBVM, thus these papers were included in this knowledge summary.
While many authors (Holmes and Ramey, 2007; Ramey, 2008; Gibbons, 2009; Faulkner, 2014) describe the application of EBVM in practice and mention the potential commercial benefits to be derived, they do not present any data or key performance indicators that show how the advent of EBVM has improved practice performance via commercial benefits. The aforementioned authors merely present ideas based on improvements to client engagement and possible improvements to business due to better clinical outcomes. Studies investigating decision making in veterinarians found that often the business aspect does not feature in a veterinarian’s decision-making process and that EBVM is seen as one of many options to make clinical decisions (Vandeweerd et al 2012; Mateus et al 2014).
A limitation of this study is the use of the two databases (CAB Abstracts and PubMed), which did not yield some of the grey literature available on EBVM. A further limitation is the very small number of papers published on the topic. This has led to the inclusion of opinion pieces, which are very low down the evidence pyramid and do not provide any empirical evidence on the topic. The reason for their inclusion was to demonstrate that there is recognition of the need for a commercial approach to EBVM.
To conclude, currently no papers provide evidence of any commercial benefits of EBVM. As such, the question relating to whether or not adoption of EBVM by veterinary practitioners leads to commercial benefits, cannot be answered by a review of the literature. While there are many papers suggesting a link between the practice of EBVM and better commercial benefits such as client satisfaction, client retention and lower production costs, a business case to clearly demonstrate the commercial benefits of EBVM is yet to be produced.
Methodology Section
Search Strategy | |
Databases searched and dates covered: | CAB Abstracts on the CAB Direct interface, date range: 1973 - 2016 and PubMed accessed via the NCBI interface, date range: 1971 - 2016 |
Search terms: | (veterinar* AND (business* OR practice OR practices OR management OR organisation* OR organization* OR company OR companies)) AND ("evidence-based" OR "evidence* based" OR EBM OR EBVM OR EBP OR EBHC) AND ((client* OR owner* OR consumer* OR customer*) AND (satisf* OR benefit*)).OR ("business case*" OR economic* OR monetary OR financ*) OR ((business* OR commercial*) ADJ5 (benefi* OR gain* OR value* OR potential* OR advantag* OR viable OR viabilit*)) |
Dates searches performed: | February 19th 2016 |
Exclusion / Inclusion Criteria | |
Exclusion: | No link between EBVM and business, commercial or financial benefits. Business benefits were defined as benefits to the veterinary business, excluded were farming and epidemiological outcomes. Non English-language. |
Inclusion: | Any link between evidence based practice and non-clinical benefits to veterinarians. |
Search Outcome | |||||
Database |
Number of results |
Excluded – does not answer PICO question |
Excluded – study design |
Excluded – Duplicates |
Total relevant papers |
NCBI PubMed |
51 | 47 | 1 | 0 | 3 |
Cab Abstracts |
71 | 57 | 2 | 6 | 6 |
Total relevant papers when duplicates removed |
9 |
The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
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