False equivalence is a logical fallacy in which two distinct entities, situations, or treatments are presented as if they were equivalent, despite relevant differences that undermine the comparison's validity.

  • Superficial similarities mask important underlying differences
  • Ignores confounding variables or context
  • Often used in observational studies without proper adjustment
  • Leads to misleading comparisons and flawed conclusions
  • Comparing microsurgical clipping and endovascular treatment of MCA aneurysms as if they were interchangeable, without accounting for aneurysm complexity, morphology, or patient selection bias.
  • Encourages inappropriate treatment decisions
  • Undermines evidence-based practice
  • Distorts systematic reviews or meta-analyses
  • Can be used to support biased or agenda-driven interpretations
  • Ensure clinical and methodological comparability between groups
  • Use stratification, matching, or multivariate adjustment
  • Acknowledge and discuss key differences in study limitations
  • false_equivalence.txt
  • Last modified: 2025/06/15 06:53
  • by administrador