Australian Centre for Health Engagement, Evidence and Values (ACHEEV), School of Health and Society, University of Wollongong, Wollongong, New South Wales, Australia
School of Public Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
BMJ Glob Health. 2023 Mar;8(3). doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2022-011182.
It is common for aspects of the COVID-19 response-and other public health initiatives before it-to be described as polarised. Public health decisions emerge from an interplay of facts, norms and preferred courses of action. What counts as 'evidence' is diverse and contestable, and disagreements over how it should be interpreted are often the product of differing choices between competing values. We propose a definition of polarisation for the context of public health expertise that acknowledges and accounts for epistemic and social values as part of evidence generation and its application to public health practice. The 'polarised' label should be used judiciously because the descriptor risks generating or exacerbating the problem by oversimplifying complex issues and positions and creating groups that seem dichotomous. 'Independence' as a one-size-fits-all answer to expert polarisation is insufficient; this solution is premised on a scientistic account of the role of evidence in decision making and does not make room for the value difference that is at the heart of both polarisation and evidence-based decision making.
在 COVID-19 应对措施的各个方面——以及之前的其他公共卫生举措——被描述为两极分化的情况下,这是很常见的。公共卫生决策是事实、规范和首选行动方案相互作用的结果。什么算作“证据”是多种多样且有争议的,对其应该如何解释的分歧往往是不同价值观之间竞争选择的产物。我们提出了一个用于公共卫生专业知识背景的两极分化定义,该定义承认并考虑了认识论和社会价值观,将其作为证据生成及其在公共卫生实践中的应用的一部分。“两极分化”这个标签应该谨慎使用,因为这个描述符有可能通过过于简化复杂的问题和立场,并创造出看似截然相反的群体,从而产生或加剧问题。“独立性”作为应对专家两极分化的一刀切的答案是不够的;这种解决方案的前提是证据在决策中的作用的一种唯科学主义解释,没有为两极分化和基于证据的决策的核心价值观差异留出空间。