Language in Clinical Reasoning: Learning and Using the Language of Collective Clinical Decision Making
by Stephen Loftus
University of Sydney
2006
The aim of the research presented in this thesis was to come to a
deeper understanding of clinical decision making from within the
interpretive paradigm. The project draws on ideas from a number of
schools of thought which have the common emphasis that the interpretive
use of language is at the core of all human activity. This research
project studied settings where health professionals and medical
students engage in clinical decision making in groups. Settings
included medical students participating in problem-based learning
tutorials and a team of health professionals working in a
multidisciplinary clinic. An underlying assumption of this project was
that in such group settings, where health professionals are required to
articulate their clinical reasoning for each other, the individuals
involved are likely to have insights that could reveal the nature of
clinical decision making. Another important assumption of this research
is that human activities, such as clinical reasoning, take place in
cultural contexts, are mediated by language and other symbol systems,
and can be best understoodwhen investigated in their historical
development. Data were gathered by interviews of medical students and
health professionals working in the two settings, and by
non-participant observation. Data analysis and interpretation revealed
that clinical decision making is primarily a social and linguistic
skill, acquired by participating in communities of practice called
health professions. These communities of practice have their own
subculture including the language game called clinical decision making
which includes an interpretive repertoire of specific language tools
and skills. New participants to the profession must come to embody
these skills under the guidance of more capable members of the
profession, and do so by working through many cases. The interpretive
repertoire that health professionals need to master includes skills
with words, categories, metaphors, heuristics, narratives, rituals,
rhetoric, and hermeneutics. All these skills need to be coordinated,
both in constructing a diagnosis and management plan and in
communicating clinical decisions to other people, in a manner that can
be judged as intelligible, legitimate, persuasive, and carrying the
moral authority for subsequent action.
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