Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
Doctors should give the best treatment, but testing treatments in clinical trials is tricky because patients get different treatments. The strict rule called 'theoretical equipoise' says researchers must have no opinion about which treatment is better, but that is unrealistic—doctors usually have preferences and small new evidence can quickly tip opinions, so few trials could start or finish under that rule. The author suggests 'clinical equipoise' instead: a trial is ethical when the expert medical community is honestly divided about which treatment is best, so individual researchers may participate even if they personally favor one treatment, provided they recognize many other experts disagree.
Logic Breakdown
Locate the claim in paragraphs 3–4 that clinical equipoise rests on an absence of consensus among expert clinicians and therefore allows trials to proceed; pick the choice that most directly denies that absence-of-consensus premise.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage21.The author's argument in the third and fourth paragraphs would be most weakened if which one of the following were true?
Correct Answer
A
'Clinical equipoise would impose rigorous ethical standards on comparative clinical trials without unreasonably constricting them.' 'One reason for conducting comparative clinical trials is to resolve a current or imminent conflict in the expert clinical community...' 'The very absence of consensus within the expert clinical community is what makes clinical equipoise possible.' Choice A asserts that most trials aim to confirm a treatment already endorsed by a consensus of experts. If that were true, the key premise—an absence of consensus—would not hold in most trials, so clinical equipoise would not be available to allow those trials to proceed. Thus A directly undercuts the central premise of the author’s argument in paragraphs 3–4 and so most weakens it.
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