Schei Edvin, Fuks Abraham, Boudreau J Donald
Department of Global Public Health and Primary Care, Center for Medical Education, University of Bergen, Kalfarv, 31, 5034, Bergen, Norway.
Department of Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
Med Health Care Philos. 2019 Jun;22(2):167-178. doi: 10.1007/s11019-018-9878-2.
Reflection has been proclaimed as a means to help physicians deal with medicine's inherent complexity and remedy many of the shortcomings of medical education. Yet, there is little agreement on the nature of reflection nor on how it should be taught and practiced. Emerging neuroscientific concepts suggest that human thought processes are largely nonconscious, in part inaccessible to introspection. Our knowledge of the world is fraught with uncertainty, ignorance and indeterminacy, and influenced by emotion, biases and illusions, including the illusion of not having illusions. Neuroscience also documents that lifelong learning processes may hone nonconscious cognition to high levels of sophistication, allowing rapid and precise perceptions, judgments and actions in complex situations. We argue that knowledge of mechanisms underlying human thought may be useful in designing educational programs to foster desired attributes such as curiosity, critical self-awareness and intuitive acumen in medical professionals. The juxtaposition of neuroscientific insights with ideas from Kant on reflective judgement, van Manen on tact, and Aristotle on phronésis, supports a concept of reflection that manifests as wise practice. We suggest that reflection in medical education should be (a) an imperative for educators seeking to guide learners to manage the complexity and "messiness" of medical practice, and (b) a role-modelling mode of medical practice characterized by self-correcting behaviors that culminate in good and right professional actions. An example illustrates reflective practice in the teaching and learning of physicianship.
反思已被宣称为一种帮助医生应对医学内在复杂性并弥补医学教育诸多不足的手段。然而,对于反思的本质以及应如何教授和实践反思,人们几乎没有达成共识。新兴的神经科学概念表明,人类的思维过程在很大程度上是无意识的,部分过程无法通过内省来了解。我们对世界的认识充满了不确定性、无知和不明确性,并受到情感、偏见和错觉的影响,包括没有错觉的错觉。神经科学还证明,终身学习过程可以将无意识认知磨练到高度复杂的水平,从而在复杂情况下实现快速而精确的感知、判断和行动。我们认为,了解人类思维背后的机制可能有助于设计教育项目,以培养医学专业人员所需的特质,如好奇心、批判性自我意识和直观敏锐度。将神经科学见解与康德关于反思性判断、范曼关于机智以及亚里士多德关于实践智慧的观点并列,支持了一种表现为明智实践的反思概念。我们建议,医学教育中的反思应该是:(a)对于寻求引导学习者应对医学实践的复杂性和“混乱性”的教育工作者来说是一项必要任务;(b)一种以自我纠正行为为特征的医学实践榜样模式,最终导致良好和正确的专业行为。一个例子说明了在医生职业教学与学习中的反思性实践。