Dr. Croskerry is professor and director, Critical Thinking Program, Division of Medical Education, Faculty of Medicine, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. Dr. Petrie is professor of emergency medicine and professor, Department of Emergency Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Dalhousie University, and chief, Capital District Health Authority Department of Emergency Medicine, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. Dr. Reilly is associate director, Internal Medicine Residency, Allegheny General Hospital, Western Pennsylvania Hospital Educational Consortium, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and assistant professor of medicine, Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Dr. Tait is assistant professor, Departments of Surgery and Anesthesia, and staff scientist, Department of Anesthesia, Toronto General Hospital, University Health Network, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Acad Med. 2014 Feb;89(2):197-200. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000000121.
Two reports in this issue address the important topic of clinical decision making. Dual process theory has emerged as the dominant model for understanding the complex processes that underlie human decision making. This theory distinguishes between the reflexive, autonomous processes that characterize intuitive decision making and the deliberate reasoning of an analytical approach. In this commentary, the authors address the polarization of viewpoints that has developed around the relative merits of the two systems. Although intuitive processes are typically fast and analytical processes slow, speed alone does not distinguish them. In any event, the majority of decisions in clinical medicine are not dependent on very short response times. What does appear relevant to diagnostic ease and accuracy is the degree to which the symptoms of the disease being diagnosed are characteristic ones. There are also concerns around some methodological issues related to research design in this area of enquiry. Reductionist approaches that attempt to isolate dependent variables may create such artificial experimental conditions that both external and ecological validity are sacrificed. Clinical decision making is a complex process with many independent (and interdependent) variables that need to be separated out in a discrete fashion and then reflected on in real time to preserve the fidelity of clinical practice. With these caveats in mind, the authors believe that research in this area should promote a better understanding of clinical practice and teaching by focusing less on the deficiencies of intuitive and analytical systems and more on their adaptive strengths.
本期有两篇报道探讨了临床决策制定这一重要主题。双加工理论已成为理解人类决策背后复杂过程的主导模型。该理论区分了直觉决策的反射性、自主性过程和分析方法的深思熟虑推理。在这篇评论中,作者讨论了围绕两种系统相对优势形成的观点极化。尽管直觉过程通常很快,而分析过程较慢,但速度本身并不能区分它们。无论如何,临床医学中的大多数决策并不依赖于非常短的反应时间。与诊断的容易程度和准确性相关的似乎是所诊断疾病的症状的特征程度。在这一研究领域,人们还对一些与研究设计相关的方法论问题表示担忧。试图孤立因变量的还原论方法可能会创造出这样的人为实验条件,从而牺牲了外部和生态有效性。临床决策制定是一个复杂的过程,有许多独立(和相互依赖)的变量需要以离散的方式分离出来,然后实时反映,以保持临床实践的保真度。考虑到这些警告,作者认为,该领域的研究应该通过关注直觉和分析系统的适应优势,而不是它们的缺陷,来促进对临床实践和教学的更好理解。