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Wiley InterScience

The American Journal of Gastroenterology

The American Journal of Gastroenterology

Volume 99 Issue 7, Pages 1371 - 1385

Published Online: 2 Jul 2004

© 2008 American College of Gastroenterology/Blackwell Publishing



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PRACTICE GUIDELINES
Ulcerative Colitis Practice Guidelines in Adults (Update): American College of Gastroenterology, Practice Parameters Committee
Asher Kornbluth, M.D. and David B. Sachar, M.D.
 The Henry D. Janowitz Division of Gastroenterology, The Department of Medicine, Mount Sinai School of Medicine; and The Practice Parameters Committee of the American College of Gastroenterology
  Reprint requests and correspondence: Asher Kornbluth, M.D., The Mount Sinai Medical Center, 1751 York Avenue, New York, NY 10128.
Copyright 2004 by the Am. Coll. of Gastroenterology

ABSTRACT

Guidelines for clinical practice are intended to indicate preferred approaches to medical problems as established by scientifically valid research. Double-blind placebo-controlled studies are preferable, but compassionate use reports and expert review articles are utilized in a thorough review of the literature conducted through Medline with the National Library of Medicine. When only data that will not withstand objective scrutiny are available, a recommendation is identified as a consensus of experts. Guidelines are applicable to all physicians who address the subject without regard to the specialty training or interests and are intended to indicate the preferable but not necessarily the only acceptable approach to a specific problem. Guidelines are intended to be flexible and must be distinguished from standards of care, which are inflexible and rarely violated. Given the wide range of specifics in any health-care problem, the physician must always choose the course best suited to the individual patient and the variables in existence at the moment of decision.

Guidelines are developed under the auspices of the American College of Gastroenterology and its Practice Parameters Committee and approved by the Board of Trustees. Each has been extensively reviewed and revised by the Committee, other experts in the field, physicians who will use them, and specialists in the science of decision of analysis. The recommendations of each guideline are therefore considered valid at the time of their production based on the data available. New developments in medical research and practice pertinent to each guideline will be reviewed at a time established and indicated at the publication in order to assure continued validity.


Received April 5, 2004; accepted April 6, 2004.

DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1572-0241.2004.40036.x About DOI

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