Abstract
Assessment of health care technologies should be an iterative process, not a single event. In the United States there are an increasing number of organized attempts at reassessment of technologies by the health industry, professional societies, and national government agencies, such as the Medical Necessity Project of Blue Cross/Blue Shield, the Clinical Efficacy Assessment Project of the American Collage of Physicians, and the work of the US Preventive Services Task Force. We examine four clinical practices-electronic fetal monitoring, episiotomy, electroencephalography, and hysterectomy-to illustrate the need to continuously reassess existing technologies and to challenge our current inertia in this critical arena of health practice.