Greenhalgh Joanne, Flynn Rob, Long Andrew F, Tyson Sarah
School of Healthcare, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9UT, UK.
Soc Sci Med. 2008 Jul;67(1):183-94. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.03.006. Epub 2008 Apr 9.
This paper explores how multidisciplinary teams (MDTs) balance encoded knowledge, in the form of standardised outcome measurement, with tacit knowledge, in the form of intuitive judgement, clinical experience and expertise, in the process of clinical decision making. The paper is based on findings from a qualitative case study of a multidisciplinary in-patient neurorehabilitation team in one UK NHS trust who routinely collected standardised outcome measures. Data were collected using non-participant observation of 16 MDT meetings and semi-structured interviews with 11 practitioners representing different professional groups. Our analysis suggests that clinicians drew on tacit knowledge to supplement, adjust or dismiss 'the scores' in making judgements about a patients' likely progress in rehabilitation, their change (or lack of) during therapy and their need for support on discharge. In many cases, the scores accorded with clinicians' tacit knowledge of the patient, and were used to reinforce this opinion, rather than determine it. In other cases, the scores, in particular the Barthel Index, provided a partial picture of the patient and in these circumstances, clinicians employed tacit knowledge to fill in the gaps. In some cases, the scores and tacit knowledge diverged and clinicians preferred to rely on their clinical experience and intuition and adjusted or downplayed the accuracy of the scores. We conclude that there are limits to the advantages of quantifying and standardising assessments of health within routine clinical practice and that standardised outcome measures can support, rather than determine clinical judgement. Tacit knowledge is essential to produce and interpret this form of encoded knowledge and to balance its significance against other information about the patient in making decisions about patient care.
本文探讨了多学科团队(MDTs)在临床决策过程中如何平衡以标准化结果测量形式存在的编码知识与以直觉判断、临床经验和专业知识形式存在的隐性知识。本文基于对英国一家国民健康服务信托基金中一个多学科住院神经康复团队的定性案例研究结果,该团队常规收集标准化结果测量数据。通过对16次多学科团队会议的非参与观察以及对代表不同专业群体的11名从业者进行半结构化访谈来收集数据。我们的分析表明,临床医生在判断患者康复可能取得的进展、治疗期间的变化(或没有变化)以及出院时对支持的需求时,会利用隐性知识来补充、调整或摒弃“分数”。在许多情况下,分数与临床医生对患者的隐性认识相符,并被用来强化这种观点,而非决定这种观点。在其他情况下,分数,尤其是巴氏指数,只能提供患者的部分情况,在这种情况下,临床医生会运用隐性知识来填补空白。在某些情况下,分数与隐性知识存在分歧,临床医生更倾向于依靠他们的临床经验和直觉,调整或淡化分数的准确性。我们得出结论,在常规临床实践中,对健康评估进行量化和标准化的优势存在局限性,标准化结果测量可以支持而非决定临床判断。隐性知识对于生成和解释这种编码知识形式,并在做出患者护理决策时将其重要性与关于患者的其他信息进行权衡至关重要。