Research Utilization in Clinical Practice

Main Article Content

Tammy L. Dela Rosa, MD, MMedSc
https://orcid.org/0009-0005-9795-1340

Abstract

Research, when mentioned to the everyday clinician, has, in my observation, always evoked images of nerds in lab gowns tinkering with glassware or number-crunching geeks hunched over laptops or charts. The average orthopedic surgeon is strongly averse to it and may mention that they are not research-oriented, or that research is not their cup of tea. While it seems that only a few have been bitten by the research bug, everyone who practices medicine—and of course, orthopedics—should spare a moment to reflect on how every aspect of practice has been touched by research. Gone are the days when the medical practitioner relied on oral tradition and eminence-based pronouncements. Medicine is today the result of a billion steps—big and small—of medical research breakthroughs. From the discovery of penicillin to the development of the polio vaccine to computer-assisted orthopedic surgery to gene editing for sickle cell disease, many are the products of lab rats (real and metaphorical), clinicians and lateral thinkers—all in the name of research.

Article Details

How to Cite
Dela Rosa, T. (2025). Research Utilization in Clinical Practice. Philippine Journal of Orthopaedics, 40(1), 6. https://doi.org/10.69472/poai.2025.01
Section
Editorial/Opinion
Author Biography

Tammy L. Dela Rosa, MD, MMedSc

Editor-in-Chief, Philippine Journal of Orthopaedics

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