Clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) are critical for translating research into clinical practice; however, high-quality evidence alone does not ensure optimal care. The integration of patient values and preferences is essential for developing recommendations that are both relevant and applicable, yet many guidelines continue to underrepresent patient perspectives and lack transparent incorporation of preference research. This review delineates the distinction between values and preferences, examines their influence on preference-sensitive decisions, and evaluates methods for eliciting patient input, such as utility-based measurements, discrete-choice experiments, and qualitative studies. Systematic integration of this evidence through guideline development enhances both credibility and patient-centeredness. Persistent challenges include issues of representativeness, methodological uncertainty, and cultural barriers. Implementing practical strategies to address these challenges will improve transparency, relevance, and acceptance of clinical practice guidelines.
This paper examines some examples of not well integrating evidence into healthcare decision-making within the Republic of Korea, a nation characterized by a rapidly evolving and financially strained healthcare system. The review introduces various conceptual frameworks of evidence-based practice, including Evidence-Based Medicine (EBM), Evidence-Based Public Health (EBPH), and Evidence-Based Health Policy (EBHP), alongside a nuanced typology of scientific (context-free and context-sensitive) and colloquial evidence. Through brief literature reviews, the paper identifies significant barriers and crucial facilitators to effective evidence utilization. These include deficiencies in research infrastructure, accessibility gaps, the influence of political and value-based considerations, and the pervasive challenge of "decision-based evidence making." The report concludes by proposing actionable recommendations aimed at strengthening the evidence ecosystem, fostering deliberative processes, enhancing Health Technology Assessment (HTA) integration, and cultivating a robust culture of evidence-informed policy-making in Korea.