Abstract

Two themes dominate this issue of the JRSM. First we have a collection of articles on the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence, which was created around the time of another organization called the Commission for Health Improvement. Together they were sometimes known as ‘NICE and nasty’. While the Commission for Health Improvement is rediscovering itself as the Healthcare Commission, NICE has managed to cling on to its acronym and its leadership.
Without doubt NICE is a much stronger and much more influential organization than it once was. Guidelines that were once automatically redirected to the nearest wastepaper basket now have to be scanned for the NICE logo, a brand that has to be taken seriously. NICE has now published nearly 50 clinical guidelines and over 30 more are in production. In addition, NICE has ventured into public health, with five sets of guidance published and 15 more in development. This constitutes probably the largest clinical guideline programme in the world.
But is it effective? NICE can regulate the introduction of new technologies into the NHS but it cannot end variable performance. Guidelines have a miserable record in changing clinical practice, even though Jayne Chidgey and colleagues from NICE suggest that they help ensure that patients derive full benefits from clinical research (JRSM 2007;
Iain Chalmers, a member of the NICE research and development advisory committee, observes that there is plenty of room for improvement in the difficult area of changing professional practice (JRSM 2007;
Susham Gupta and James Warner are less polite (JRSM 2007;
A future role of NICE might be to pontificate on the value of spinal manipulation—the second dominant theme in this issue—although I doubt it would settle the row played out in the letters pages this month (JRSM 2007;
Peer reviewers
Deborah Bowman, University of London, UK Elizabeth Chapman, West Middlesex University Hospital, UK Alison Chisholm, Picker Institute Europe, Oxford, UK Arthur Hollman, Pett, UK Roger Jones, Kings College London, UK Janet McComb, Freeman Hospital, Newcastle, UK Jaykar Panchmatia, National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, London, UK Peter Perkins, Southbourne Surgery, Bournemouth, UK Laura Price, Hammersmith Hospital, London, UK Roisin Pill, University of Wales, UK John Sharpley, Royal Naval Psychiatry, Portsmouth, UK Karol Sikora, CancerPartnersUK, London Steve Wilkinson, University of East Anglia, UK
