Trail Blazing or Jam Session? Towards a new Concept of Clinical Decision-Making
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/10601Date
2016-11-17Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Risør, TorstenAbstract
Clinical decision-making (CDM) is key in learning to be a doctor as the defining activity in their clinical work.
CDM is often portrayed in the literature as similar to ‘trail blazing’; the doctor as the core agent, clearing away
obstacles on the path towards diagnosis and treatment. However, in a fieldwork of young doctors in Denmark, it
was difficult connect their practice to this image. This article present the exploration of this discrepancy in the heart
of medical practice and how an alternative image emerged; that of a ‘jam session’. The exploration is represented as
a case-based hypothesis-testing: First, a theoretically and empirically informed hypothesis (H0) of how doctors
perform CDM is developed. In H0, CDM is a stepwise process of reasoning about clinical data, often influenced
by outside contextual factors. Then, H0 is tested against a case from ethnographic fieldwork with doctors going
through internship. Although the case is chosen for characteristics that make it ‘most likely’ to verify the hypothesis,
verification proves difficult. The case challenges preconceptions in CDM-literature about chronology, context,
objectivity, cognition, agency, and practice. The young doctor is found not to make decisions, but rather to
participate in CDM; an activity akin to the dynamics found in a jam session. Their participation circles in and
through four concurrent interrelated constructions that suggest a new conceptualization of CDM; a starting point
for a deeper understanding of actual practice in a changing clinical environment.
Description
Manuscript. Published version available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13648470.2016.1239695