Medical Problem Solving
- 1 March 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Evaluation & the Health Professions
- Vol. 13 (1), 5-36
- https://doi.org/10.1177/016327879001300102
Abstract
This essay reviews the origins, findings and influence of the monograph Medical Problem Solving: An Analysis of Clinical Reasoning. Majorfindings of the monograph are reviewed in the light of subsequent work and the results of selected studies of clinical cognition are related to the book's conclusions, thus sketching the growth of this field of research in the decade since publication. Several remaining methodologicalproblems and scholarly issues in the field are discussed, including: sampling cases and subjects, the definition of medical expertise, the role of verbal report in analyzing thinking, the level of clinical realism needed in research, and the relation of informationprocessing approaches to more quantitative approaches such as behavioral decision theory and social judgment theory.This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- Clinical Reasoning and Cognitive ProcessesMedical Decision Making, 1987
- The clinical reasoning processMedical Education, 1987
- Decision Analysis: A Basic Clinical Skill?New England Journal of Medicine, 1987
- Decision AnalysisNew England Journal of Medicine, 1987
- Reflection in preferences under risk: Who and when may suggest why.Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 1986
- Knowledge and clinical problem-solvingMedical Education, 1985
- Medical problem-solving: some questionable assumptionsMedical Education, 1985
- The structure of medical knowledge in the memories of medical students and general practitioners: categories and prototypesMedical Education, 1984
- Teaching Clinical Medicine by Iterative Hypothesis TestingNew England Journal of Medicine, 1983
- A Technique for the Study of Problem SolvingEducational and Psychological Measurement, 1955