Literature DB >> 11080981

The aesthetics of clinical judgment: exploring the link between diagnostic elegance and effective resource utilization.

G Khushf1.   

Abstract

Many physicians assert that new cost-control mechanisms inappropriately interfere with clinical decision-making. They claim that high costs arise from poorly practiced medicine, and argue that effective utilization of resources is best promoted by advancing the scientific and ethical ideals of medicine. However, the claim is not warranted by empirical evidence. In this essay, I show how it rests upon aesthetic considerations associated with diagnostic elegance. I first consider scientific rationality generally. After a review of analytical empiricist and socio-historical approaches in the philosophy of science, a form of Kant's aesthetic is used to explain how scientific discovery and justification are linked, and to show how meta-theoretical considerations associated with the goals and method of science work together with exemplars of practice. This analysis enables us to understand how the ideals of medicine as a science guide the initial patient history and physical exam in such a way that a parsimonious use of tests is indicated. Aesthetic considerations unite the basic scientific and ethical commitments of the modern medical paradigm and are central for rightly understanding clinical judgment.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Analytical Approach; Health Care and Public Health; Professional Patient Relationship

Mesh:

Year:  1999        PMID: 11080981     DOI: 10.1023/a:1009941101276

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Health Care Philos        ISSN: 1386-7423


  18 in total

1.  Medicine: the endangered patient-centered ethic.

Authors:  Marcia Angell
Journal:  Hastings Cent Rep       Date:  1987-02       Impact factor: 2.683

Review 2.  Medicine in John Locke's philosophy.

Authors:  M A Sanchez-Gonzalez
Journal:  J Med Philos       Date:  1990-12

3.  Physicians as double agents: maintaining trust in an era of multiple accountabilities.

Authors:  S M Shortell; T M Waters; K W Clarke; P P Budetti
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  1998 Sep 23-30       Impact factor: 56.272

4.  Managing care--should we adopt a new ethic?

Authors:  J P Kassirer
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  1998-08-06       Impact factor: 91.245

5.  A radical rupture in the paradigm of modern medicine: conflicts of interest, fiduciary obligations, and the scientific ideal.

Authors:  G Khushf
Journal:  J Med Philos       Date:  1998-02

6.  The care of the patient: art or science?

Authors:  G L Engel
Journal:  Johns Hopkins Med J       Date:  1977-05

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Authors:  E D Pellegrino
Journal:  Hosp Prog       Date:  1978-08

Review 8.  The autopsy. Some ethical reflections on the obligations of pathologists, hospitals, families, and society.

Authors:  E D Pellegrino
Journal:  Arch Pathol Lab Med       Date:  1996-08       Impact factor: 5.534

9.  Biomedicine's failure to achieve Flexnerian standards of education.

Authors:  G L Engel
Journal:  J Med Educ       Date:  1978-05

10.  The clinical application of the biopsychosocial model.

Authors:  G L Engel
Journal:  Am J Psychiatry       Date:  1980-05       Impact factor: 18.112

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  4 in total

1.  Pleasure in medical practice.

Authors:  Jean-Christophe Weber
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2012-05

2.  Reflection in medical education: intellectual humility, discovery, and know-how.

Authors:  Edvin Schei; Abraham Fuks; J Donald Boudreau
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2019-06

3.  Immanuel Kant, his philosophy and medicine.

Authors:  Urban Wiesing
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2007-08-22

4.  A social-technological epistemology of clinical decision-making as mediated by imaging.

Authors:  Sophie van Baalen; Annamaria Carusi; Ian Sabroe; David G Kiely
Journal:  J Eval Clin Pract       Date:  2016-10-03       Impact factor: 2.431

  4 in total

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