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ABC of Clinical Reasoning

Contributors

Abstract

Being a good clinician is not just about knowledge – how doctors and other healthcare professionals think, reason and make decisions is arguably their most critical skill. While medical schools and postgraduate training programmes teach and assess the knowledge and skills required to practice as a doctor, few offer comprehensive training in clinical reasoning or decision making. This is important because studies suggest that diagnostic error is common and results in significant harm to patients – and errors in reasoning account for the majority of diagnostic errors.

The ABC of Clinical Reasoning covers core elements of the thinking and decision making associated with clinical practice – from what clinical reasoning is, what it involves and how to teach it. Informed by the latest advances in cognitive psychology, education and studies of expertise, the ABC covers:

Evidence-based history and examination
Use and interpretation of diagnostic tests
How doctors think – models of clinical reasoning
Cognitive and affective biases
Metacognition and cognitive de-biasing strategies
Patient-centred evidence based medicine
Teaching clinical reasoning

From an international team of authors, the ABC of Clinical Reasoning is essential reading for all students, medical professionals and other clinicians involved in diagnosis, in order to improve their decision-making skills and provide better patient care.

Citation

Cooper, N., & Frain, J. (Eds.). (2016). ABC of Clinical Reasoning. Wiley

Book Type Edited Book
Publication Date 2016-06
Deposit Date Dec 31, 2024
Publisher Wiley
Peer Reviewed Not Peer Reviewed
ISBN 9781119059080
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/43631265