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思考思维:对患者安全的影响。

Thinking about thinking: implications for patient safety.

作者信息

Montgomery Kathryn

机构信息

Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA.

出版信息

Healthc Q. 2009;12 Spec No Patient:e191-4. doi: 10.12927/hcq.2009.20948.

Abstract

Clinical medicine, a learned, rational, science-using practice, is labelled a science even though physicians have the good sense not to practise it that way. Rather than thinking like scientists - or how we think scientists think - physicians are engaged in analogical, interpretive reasoning that resembles Aristotle's phronesis, or practical reasoning, more closely than episteme, or scientific reasoning. In medicine, phronesis is clinical judgment; and while it depends on both a fund of information and extensive experience, somehow it is not quite teachable. This practical, clinical rationality relies on case narrative for teaching and learning about illness and disease, for recording and communicating about patient care and, inevitably, for thinking about and remembering the details, as well as the overarching rules of practice. At the same time, "anecdotal" remains the most pejorative word in medicine, and the tension between the justifiable caution this disdain expresses and the pervasive narrative structure of medical knowledge is characteristic of clinical knowing generally: a tug-of-war between apparent irreconcilables that can be settled only by an appeal to the circumstances of the clinical situation. Practical rationality in the clinical encounter is characterized by a productive circulation between the particular details of the patient's presentation and general information about disease stored as a taxonomy of cases. Evidence-based medicine can improve this negotiation between general knowledge and the patient's particulars, but it cannot replace it. In a scientific era, clinical judgment remains the quintessential intellectual strength of the clinician. Why, then, do we not teach the epistemology of medicine? Understanding the mis-description of physicians' thinking - and the accompanying claim that medicine is, in itself, a science - could mitigate the misplaced perfectionism that makes mistakes in medicine personal and unthinkable.

摘要

临床医学是一门有学识、理性且运用科学的实践活动,尽管医生们很明智地并未以科学的方式来践行它,但仍被贴上了科学的标签。医生们并非像科学家那样思考——或者说并非像我们认为科学家思考的方式那样——而是进行类比性、解释性推理,这种推理与亚里士多德的实践智慧(即实践推理)更为相似,而非与纯粹科学知识(即科学推理)相似。在医学中,实践智慧就是临床判断力;虽然它既依赖于信息储备,也依赖于丰富经验,但不知为何,它不太容易传授。这种实用的临床理性依赖病例叙述来教授和学习疾病,记录和交流患者护理情况,并且不可避免地要思考和记住细节以及总体的实践规则。与此同时,“轶事性的”仍然是医学中最具贬义的词汇,这种轻蔑所表达的合理谨慎与医学知识普遍存在的叙述结构之间的紧张关系,是临床认知的普遍特征:一场看似不可调和的拔河比赛,只有诉诸临床情况才能解决。临床诊疗中的实践理性表现为患者表现的具体细节与作为病例分类存储的疾病一般信息之间的有效循环。循证医学可以改善一般知识与患者具体情况之间的这种协调,但无法取而代之。在科学时代,临床判断力仍然是临床医生最典型的智力优势。那么,我们为什么不教授医学认识论呢?理解对医生思维的错误描述——以及随之而来的认为医学本身就是一门科学的观点——可以减轻那种将医学错误个人化且不可想象的错误完美主义。

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