New England Research Institutes, Watertown, MA 02472, USA.
J Health Soc Behav. 2012 Sep;53(3):313-28. doi: 10.1177/0022146512456026. Epub 2012 Aug 29.
Nonmedical factors and diagnostic certainty contribute to variation in clinical decision making, but the process by which this occurs remains unclear. We examine how physicians' interpretations of patient sex-gender affect diagnostic certainty and, in turn, decision making for coronary heart disease. Data are from a factorial experiment of 256 physicians who viewed 1 of 16 video vignettes with different patient-actors presenting the same symptoms of coronary heart disease. Physician participants completed a structured interview and provided a narrative about their decision-making processes. Quantitative analysis showed that diagnostic uncertainty reduces the likelihood that physicians will order tests and medications appropriate for an urgent cardiac condition in particular. Qualitative analysis revealed that a subset of physicians applied knowledge that women have "atypical symptoms" as a generalization, which engendered uncertainty for some. Findings are discussed in relation to social-psychological processes that underlie clinical decision making and the social framing of medical knowledge.
非医学因素和诊断确定性会影响临床决策,但决策过程仍不清楚。我们研究了医生对患者性别角色的解释如何影响诊断确定性,并进而影响冠心病的决策。数据来自对 256 名医生进行的析因实验,他们观看了 16 个不同患者角色呈现相同冠心病症状的视频片段之一。医生参与者完成了一项结构化访谈,并提供了他们决策过程的叙述。定量分析表明,诊断不确定性降低了医生为特定紧急心脏状况开出适当检查和药物的可能性。定性分析显示,一部分医生将女性“非典型症状”的知识作为一种概括来应用,这给一些人带来了不确定性。研究结果与临床决策背后的社会心理过程以及医学知识的社会框架有关。