The Research Unit for General Practice and Section of General Practice, Department of Public Health, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Research Unit for General Practice, NORCE Norwegian Research Centre, Bergen, Norway.
Scand J Prim Health Care. 2019 Dec;37(4):393-401. doi: 10.1080/02813432.2019.1663592. Epub 2019 Sep 11.
Getting the right diagnosis is supposed to provide an explanation of a patient's health problem and inform health care decisions. As a core element of clinical reasoning, diagnosis deserves systematic and transparent analysis. Conceptual tools can make doctors become aware of and explore diagnostic knowing. We demonstrate diagnostic knowing analysed as interpretative and contextualised activity. Our analysis is based on Lonergan's theory of knowing, constituting the cognitive structures as experiencing, understanding, and judging, in a general practice case. Analysis makes the complexity of diagnostic knowing in this context more transparent, in this case concluding with four diagnostic labels: a corn, constipation, headache and atrial fibrillation. We demonstrate how a medically significant diagnosis does not necessarily evolve deductively from complaints. The opening lines from the patient give ideas of where to look for possible explanations - questions for understanding - rather than diagnostic hypotheses. Such questions emerge from the GP's experiences from meeting the patient, including imaginations and interpretations. When ideas and questions regarding diagnoses have been developed, they may be judged and subjected to reflection. Questioning may also emerge as transitory concerns, not extensively ruled out. Lonergan's theory demonstrated a strong fit with these aspects of diagnostic knowing in general practice. Analysis demonstrated systematic, transparent approaches to diagnostic knowing, relevant for clinical teaching. We argue that an interpretative understanding of diagnosis can change clinical practice, complementing hypothetico-deductive strategies by recognising additional substantial diagnostic modes and giving access to scholarly reflection.Key PointsDiagnosis is a core element of clinical reasoning, deserving systematic and transparent analysis beyond hypothetico-deductive reasoning or pattern recognitionDiagnostic knowing in general practice is a special instance of all human knowing with subjectivity, interpretation and reflexivity as essential elementsLonergan's theory for knowing based on experiencing, understanding, and judging allowed us to map, decode and recognise advanced acts of clinical reasoning We share our experiences of how these concepts gave us a tool for systematic analysis of the complexities taking place in the GP's office on an ordinary day.
获得正确的诊断应该为患者的健康问题提供解释,并为医疗决策提供信息。作为临床推理的核心要素,诊断应该进行系统和透明的分析。概念工具可以使医生意识到并探索诊断知识。我们展示了作为解释性和情境化活动的分析性诊断知识。我们的分析基于洛内根的认知理论,将体验、理解和判断的认知结构构成一个普通实践案例。分析使这个背景下的诊断知识的复杂性更加透明,在这个案例中,最终得出了四个诊断标签:鸡眼、便秘、头痛和心房颤动。我们展示了一个有医学意义的诊断不一定是从投诉中演绎出来的。患者的开头几句话给出了寻找可能解释的思路——理解的问题——而不是诊断假设。这些问题源于全科医生与患者会面的经验,包括想象和解释。当关于诊断的想法和问题出现时,它们可以被判断并进行反思。质疑也可能作为暂时的关注点出现,而不是被广泛排除。洛内根的理论与普通实践中的这些诊断知识方面非常契合。分析展示了对诊断知识的系统、透明的方法,这对于临床教学是相关的。我们认为,对诊断的解释性理解可以改变临床实践,通过识别额外的实质性诊断模式并为学术反思提供途径,补充假设演绎策略。