Title of article :
Does management reasoning constitute the backbone of the clinical learning environment?: Conceptual analysis of the existing notions
Author/Authors :
KUMAR V, DINESH Department of Anatomy - Jawaharlal Institute of Postgraduate Medical Education and Research - Puducherry, India , BASHEER, ANEESH Department of Medicine - Pondicherry Institute of Medical Sciences - Puducherry, India
Abstract :
Management reasoning is a paradigm whereby learning occurs in a context bound fashion on analysing the biophysical factors
existing in the clinical learning environment. In the contemporary
medical education forums, much importance is being laid on
clinical reasoning and this warrants the appropriate usage of the biomedical knowledge in arriving at the diagnosis. We perceive
that clinical reasoning, in pure sense, often doesn’t solve the
purpose of rendering the best management plan to the patient.
This holds stronger when the case is non-linear and highly
complex in nature. Management reasoning fills the gap between
hypotheses generation, i.e. accomplishing diagnosis and devising
management plan. Indeed, it is a complex activity relying on
several factors including the physician’s perceptual abilities and
situated cognition derived from formal and informal learning
experiences. In contrast to clinical reasoning, which can be taught
using structured scenarios, management reasoning necessitates
analysing multitude of factors revolving around a patient and
prioritizing those in order to titrate the best possible management
plan. This commentary spotlights different dimensions of
management reasoning, emphasizes the need of teaching it in the
current scenarios, enlists the ways it can be taught, and opens the platform for discussing further on this underemphasized topic.
Keywords :
Clinical reasoning , Decision making , Social determinants
Journal title :
Journal of Advances in Medical Education and Professionalism