Adam Seth Cifu | |
Nationality: | American |
Occupation: | Physician, academic, author and researcher |
Awards: | Louis N. Pangaro, MD, Educational Program Development Award, The Clerkship Directors of Internal Medicine |
Website: | https://www.adamcifu.com/ |
Education: | B.A., Chemistry M.D. |
Alma Mater: | Haverford College Cornell University Medical College |
Workplaces: | The University of Chicago |
Adam Seth Cifu is an American physician, academic, author, and researcher. He is Professor of Medicine and Director of Academic Programming at the Bucksbaum Institute for Clinical Excellence at the University of Chicago.[1]
Cifu has authored over 125 peer-reviewed publications on clinical practice, medical decision-making, medical reversal, and general internal medicine. He is the co-author of a textbook on clinical reasoning, Symptom to Diagnosis: An Evidence-Based Guide,[2] and a book about medical decision making for the lay audience, Ending Medical Reversal: Improving Outcomes, Saving Lives.[3] He, together with Scott Stern, hosted the podcast S2D: The Symptom to Diagnosis Podcast[4] and currently hosts The Clinical Excellence Podcast.[5]
Cifu attended the Dalton School in New York City. He then received his bachelor's degree (with honors) in chemistry from Haverford College in 1989, and a medical degree from Cornell University Medical College (now Weill Cornell Medicine) in 1993. He completed his internal medicine residency at the Beth Israel Hospital (now in Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center) in 1996, and then served as the Primary Care Chief Resident.[1]
Cifu started his career as a clinical fellow at Harvard Medical School in 1993, and became an instructor in medicine in 1996. He then joined the faculty of the University of Chicago as an Assistant Professor of Medicine in 1997. He was promoted to Associate Professor in 2005, and to Professor of Medicine in 2013.[1]
Cifu's research is primarily focused on the evidence base of clinical practice.
A medical reversal occurs when a robust clinical trial produces results that contradict existing clinical practice and the older, less methodologically sound trials on which it is based. The term was coined in 2011 in an article by Vinay Prasad, Victor Gall, and Cifu published in the Archives of Internal Medicine (now JAMA Internal Medicine).[6]
Cifu and Prasad have published extensively on the topic. In one large study, Prasad, Cifu, and collaborators reviewed all of the original research articles published in the New England Journal of Medicine between 2001 and 2010. They identified 146 common medical practices that offered no net benefits. They also focused on low-value practices and patterns of medical research, and found out that reversal of established medical practice occurs across all classes of medical practice.[7] In his paper published in 2012, Cifu discussed the reversals in terms of established medical practices, and suggested that the established standards must be abandoned if they are not beneficial enough.[8]
Cifu and Prasad brought together much of their research on medical reversal in a book entitled Ending Medical Reversal: Improving Outcomes, Saving Lives. Abigail Zuger reviewed the book in The New York Times writing that the book concerns itself with "how often modern medicine reverses itself, analyzing why it happens, and suggesting ways to make it stop."[9]
Cifu has spent years teaching clinical medicine and evidence-based medicine at the University of Chicago. He has directed the courses Medical Evidence and Critical Appraisal of the Landmark Medical Literature, and, for over twenty years, directed the university's internal medicine fellowship. With Scott Stern and Diane Altkorn he authored the textbook, Symptom to Diagnosis: An Evidence Based Guide. The book, originally published in 2006, is currently in its fourth edition. The book teaches an evidence-based, step-by-step process for evaluating, diagnosing, and treating patients based on their clinical complaints. Doody's Review stated that the book is "useful as a refresher for established clinicians when the more common diagnoses are not the cause of a patient's complaints."[10] Cifu and Stern hosted the podcast S2D: The Symptom to Diagnosis Podcast in which they shared a case and diagnosis based on each chapter in the book. He now hosts The Clinical Excellence Podcast, which is dedicated to various facets of the physician/patient relationship.
Cifu has published many health humanities essays in medical journals on topics such as the death of his patients,[11] the changes in a physician's practice over time,[12] and the variability of practice quality from day to day.[13] His most highly viewed article concerns advice to students starting medical school.[14] He is a founder of the Sensible Medicine blog on Substack.