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Better world: Beware of common sense

By Michael Le Page

9 September 2009

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

Change we can believe in? Only if it’s backed by evidence

(Image: Sipa Press / Rex Features)

Read more: Blueprint for a better world

Good intentions are not enough. If leaders and governments are serious about achieving their aims, they must base their actions on hard evidence.

YOU break your arm. At the hospital, the doctor tells you his team is going to inject iron nanoparticles into the broken bone and use electromagnets to realign it. Wow, you say, you’ve never heard of this method. “Oh, it’s never been tried before,” says the doctor. “But our hospital needs some publicity, and it sounds really impressive and high-tech, doesn’t it?”

You would rightly be appalled if hospitals chose treatments this way. We expect medical therapies to undergo rigorous trials to ensure they are safe and effective. Yet we seem content to let our leaders conjure up policies based on what sounds good, rather than on what has been proved to work.

The effectiveness of policies in many areas, from education and crime to reducing greenhouse gas emissions, can be empirically determined. As in medicine, the best evidence comes from randomised controlled trials; better still, a systematic review of multiple randomised trials.

Admittedly, there are plenty of problems with evidence-based government. There are many aspects of government which the scientific method cannot be applied to and, even where it is applicable, it can be time-consuming and expensive. Trials have to be well designed and they often need to involve large numbers to produce robust results. Researchers also need to ensure trial results are directly relevant to policy-makers.

Proper trials are…

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