Clinical reasoning: new challenges
Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics, Vol 30, 3: 173-179.
William E. Stempsey
This article is an introduction to a special issue of Theoretical
Medicine and Bioethics on clinical reasoning. Clinical reasoning
encompasses the gamut of thinking about clinical medical practice-the
evaluation and management of patients' medical problems. Theories of
clinical reasoning may be normative or descriptive; that is, they may
offer recommendations on how clinicians ought to think or they may
simply attempt to describe how clinicians actually do think. This
article briefly surveys these approaches in order to show the
complexity of clinical reasoning and the inadequacy of any one theory
for capturing the full richness of clinical reasoning. The authors of
this issue offer both normative and descriptive elements in their
accounts. Topics discussed include the importance for clinical
reasoning of tacit knowing, risk assessment, narrative and
hermeneutics, wisdom, and virtue epistemology.
Read the article.
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