Higgins H M, Huxley J N, Wapenaar W, Green M J
Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, School of Veterinary Medicine, Guildford, University of Surrey, GU2 7TE, United Kingdom.
University of Nottingham, School of Veterinary Medicine and Science, Sutton Bonington Campus, Leicestershire, LE12 5RD, United Kingdom.
J Dairy Sci. 2014;97(6):3394-408. doi: 10.3168/jds.2013-7087. Epub 2014 Mar 27.
The clinical beliefs (expectations and demands) of veterinarians regarding herd-level strategies to control mastitis, lameness, and Johne's disease were quantified in a numerical format; 94 veterinarians working in England (UK) were randomly selected and, during interviews, a statistical technique called probabilistic elicitation was used to capture their clinical expectations as probability distributions. The results revealed that markedly different clinical expectations existed for all 3 diseases, and many pairs of veterinarians had expectations with nonoverlapping 95% Bayesian credible intervals. For example, for a 3-yr lameness intervention, the most pessimistic veterinarian was centered at an 11% population mean reduction in lameness prevalence (95% credible interval: 0-21%); the most enthusiastic veterinarian was centered at a 58% reduction (95% credible interval: 38-78%). This suggests that a major change in beliefs would be required to achieve clinical agreement. Veterinarians' clinical expectations were used as priors in Bayesian models where they were combined with synthetic data (from randomized clinical trials of different sizes) to explore the effect of new evidence on current clinical opinion. The mathematical models make predictions based on the assumption that veterinarians will update their beliefs logically. For example, for the lameness intervention, a 200-farm clinical trial that estimated a 30% mean reduction in lameness prevalence was predicted to be reasonably convincing to the most pessimist veterinarian; that is, in light of this data, they were predicted to believe there would be a 0.92 probability of exceeding the median clinical demand of this sample of veterinarians, which was a 20% mean reduction in lameness. Currently, controversy exists over the extent to which veterinarians update their beliefs logically, and further research on this is needed. This study has demonstrated that probabilistic elicitation and a Bayesian framework are useful for evaluating the diversity and strength of veterinarians' clinical beliefs. The wide variations observed have implications for designing future projects. Although many factors influence disease control, nonetheless the heterogeneity in beliefs also raises concern over the extent to which a broadly consistent approach is currently being achieved; it supports the argument for more randomized clinical trials and for national programs to control nonstatutory endemic diseases.
对兽医关于控制乳腺炎、跛足和副结核的畜群水平策略的临床信念(期望和要求)以数字形式进行了量化;随机选择了94名在英国英格兰工作的兽医,并在访谈期间使用一种称为概率引出的统计技术,将他们的临床期望捕获为概率分布。结果显示,所有这三种疾病都存在明显不同的临床期望,并且许多对兽医的期望具有不重叠的95%贝叶斯可信区间。例如,对于一项为期3年的跛足干预措施,最悲观的兽医预计跛足患病率的总体平均降低率为11%(95%可信区间:0 - 21%);最乐观的兽医预计降低率为58%(95%可信区间:38 - 78%)。这表明要达成临床共识需要信念上的重大改变。兽医的临床期望在贝叶斯模型中用作先验,与综合数据(来自不同规模的随机临床试验)相结合,以探索新证据对当前临床观点的影响。数学模型基于兽医将逻辑地更新其信念这一假设进行预测。例如,对于跛足干预措施,一项估计跛足患病率平均降低30%的200个农场的临床试验预计对最悲观的兽医有足够的说服力;也就是说,鉴于这些数据,预计他们会认为有0.92的概率超过该样本兽医的临床需求中位数,即跛足平均降低20%。目前,关于兽医在多大程度上逻辑地更新其信念存在争议,对此需要进一步研究。本研究表明,概率引出和贝叶斯框架有助于评估兽医临床信念的多样性和强度。观察到的广泛差异对未来项目的设计有影响。尽管许多因素影响疾病控制,但信念的异质性也引发了对目前在多大程度上正在实现广泛一致方法的担忧;它支持进行更多随机临床试验以及实施国家计划来控制非法定地方病的观点。