2022
Anjum, R.L., Chandler, R.E. & Rocca, E. (2022) Dispositions and Causality Assessment in Pharmacovigilance: Proposing the Dx3 Approach for Assessing Causality with Small Data Sets. Pharm Med (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s40290-022-00429-9
2020
Anjum, R.L., Copeland, S. and Rocca, E. (2020) Rethinking Causality, Complexity and Evidence for the Unique Patient. A CauseHealth Resource for Health Professionals and the Clinical Encounter, Springer, open access book
Nicholls, D., Groven, K.S., Kinsella, A. and Anjum, R.L. (Eds) (2020) Mobilizing Knowledge. Critical Reflections on the Foundations and Practice of Physiotherapy, Springer
Out of Chaos – Meaning Arises. The lived experience of re-habituating the habitual body when suffering from burnout, Qualitative Health Research
, . (2020)Rocca, E. and Anjum, R. L. (2020) Causal Evidence and Dispositions in Medicine and Public Health, International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Rocca, E. and Anjum, R. L. (2020) Erice Call for Change: Utilising Patient Experiences to Enhance the Quality and Safety of Healthcare, Drug Safety
Rocca, E. Anjum, R.L. and Mumford, S. (2020) Causal Insights from Failure, in A. La Caze and B. Osimani (eds), Uncertainty in Pharmacology: Epistemology, Methods and Decisions (Boston Series for the History and Philosophy of Science), Springer, pp. 39-56
2019
Rocca, E. and Anjum, R. L. (2019) Why Causal Predictions Fail. An Example from Oil Contamination, Ethics, Policy & Environment, 22: 197-213
Rocca, E., Copeland, S., Edwards, I.R. (2019). Pharmacovigilance as scientific discovery: an argument for trans-disciplinarity. Drug Safety
Anjum, R.L., Andersen, F., Rocca, E. (2019). Philosophical BIAS is the one bias that science cannot avoid. eLife, 8:e44929 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.44929
Anjum, R.L. (2019) Donald Gillies, ‘Causality, Probability, and Medicine’. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science
Burned out or “just” depressed? An existential phenomenological exploration of burnout, Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1111/jep.13288
, . (2019)Naked in the eyes of the public: A phenomenological study of the lived experience of suffering from burnout while waiting for recognition to be ill. Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1111/jep.13244
, . (2019)2018
Anjum, R. L., Copeland, S. and Rocca, E. (2018) Medical Scientists and Philosophers Worldwide Appeal to EBM to Expand the Notion of ‘Evidence’, BMJ Evidence Based Medicine, bmjebm-2018-111092
Andersen, F., Anjum, R.L. and Mumford, S. (2018) Causation and Quantum Physics, in Anjum and Mumford What Tends to Be. The Philosophy of Dispositional Modality, ch. 4
CauseHealth special issue for the Guidelines Challenge conference
2018 Philosophy Thematic Issue of the Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice. List of contributions:
Loughlin, M., Mercuri, M., Pârvan, A., Copeland, S., Tonelli, M. and Buetow, S. (2018) Treating Real People: Science and Humanity, Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 24: xx-xx, DOI 10.1111/jep.13024
Anjum, R. L. (2018) What is the Guidelines Challenge? The CauseHealth Perspective, Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 24: 1027-3
Anjum, R. L., Copeland, S., Kerry, R. and Rocca, E. (2018) The Guidelines Challenge—Philosophy, Practice, Policy, Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 24: 1120-6
Greenhalg, T. (2018) Of lamp posts, keys, and fabled drunkards: A perspectival tale of 4 guidelines, Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 24: 1132-38
Kirkengen, AL. (2018) From wholes to fragments to wholes—what gets lost in translation?. Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 24: 1145– 49.
Engebretsen, K. M. (2018) Suffering Without a Medical Diagnosis. A Critical View on the Biomedical Attitudes Towards Persons Suffering from Burnout and the Implications for Medical Care, Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 24: 1150-7
Cartwright, N. (2018) What evidence should guidelines take note of? Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 24: 1139– 44.
Kelly, MP. The need for a rationalist turn in evidence‐based medicine. Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 24: 1158– 65.
Anjum, R.L. and Mumford, S. (2018) A Process Theory of Causation, in Nicholson, D. J. & Dupré, J. (eds.). Everything Flows: Towards a Processual Philosophy of Biology. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 61-75. Open access
Anjum, R. L. and Mumford, S. (2018) Causation in Science and the Methods of Scientific Discovery, Oxford University Press
Anjum, R.L. and Mumford, S. (2018) Powers and Potentiality, in M. Quante and K. Engelhard (eds), Handbook of Potentiality, Dordrecht: Springer
Anjum, R. L. and Mumford, S. (2018) What Tends to Be, Routledge
Anjum, R. L. and Rocca, E. (2018) From Ideal to Real Risk. Why re-thinking Causation is Crucial, Risk Analysis, 39: 729-40
Rocca, E. (2018) The Judgements that Evidence Based Medicine Adopts, Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 24: 1184-90
2017
CauseHealth special issue for the N=1 workshop
2017 Philosophy Thematic Issue of the Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice. List of contributions:
Anjum, R.L. and Mumford, S. (2017) A Philosophical Argument Against Evidence Based Policy, Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 23: 1045-50
Feragen, A. R. R. (2017) Encouraging professional scepticism in medical practice. Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 23:1051–54.
Copeland, S. (2017) Unexpected Findings and Promoting Monocausal Claims, A Cautionary Tale, Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 23: 1055-61
Low, M. (2017) A novel clinical framework: The use of dispositions in clinical practice. A person centred approach. Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 23: 1062-70.
Kirkengen, AL. (2017) Creating chronicity. Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 23: 1071–74. https://doi.org/10.1111/jep.12715
Berg, H, Slaattelid, R. (2017) Facts and values in psychotherapy—A critique of the empirical reduction of psychotherapy within evidence‐based practice.Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 23: 1075–80.
Arnaudo, E. (2017) Pain and dualism: Which dualism? Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 23: 1081–86.
Anjum, R.L. and Mumford, S. (2017) Emergence and Demergence, in M. Paoletti and F. Orilia (eds), Philosophical and Scientific Perspectives on Downward Causation, London: Routledge, pp. 92-109
Anjum, R.L. and Mumford, S. (2017) Mutual Manifestations and Martin’s Two Triangles, in Jonathan Jacobs (ed.) Causal Powers, Oxford University Press, pp. 77-89
Copeland, S. (2017) On Serendipity in Science: Discovery at the Intersection of Chance and Wisdom, Synthese, DOI 10.1007/s11229-017-1544-3
Rocca, E. (2017) Bridging the Boundaries between Scientists and Clinicians. Mechanistic Hypotheses and Patient Stories in Risk Assessment of Drugs, Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 23: 114-120
Rocca, E. and Andersen, F. (2017) How Biological Background Assumptions Influence Scientific Risk Evaluation of Stacked Genetically Modified Plants: An Analysis of Research Hypotheses and Argumentations, Life Sciences, Society and Policy, 13: 11.
2016
Andersen, F. and Arenhart, J. (2016) Metaphysics Within Science. Against Radical Naturalism, Metascience, 47: 159-180
Anjum, R.L. (2016) Evidence-Based or Person-Centered. An Ontological Debate, European Journal of Person Centered Healthcare, 4 (2): 421-9. Open access beta-version
2015
Anjum, R.L., Copeland, S., Mumford, S. and Rocca, E. (2015) CauseHealth: Integrating Philosophical Perspectives into Person Centered Healthcare, European Journal for Person Centered Healthcare, 3: 427-30
Anjum, R.L., Kerry, R. and Mumford, S. (2015) Evidence Based on What?, Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice, 21(6): E11-E12