Literature DB >> 11700381

Decision technologies and the independent professional: the future's challenge to learning and leadership.

J Dowie1.   

Abstract

Most references to "leadership" and "learning" as sources of quality improvement in medical care reflect an implicit commitment to the decision technology of "clinical judgement". All attempts to sustain this waning decision technology by clinical guidelines, care pathways, "evidence based practice", problem based curricula, and other stratagems only increase the gap between what is expected of doctors in today's clinical situation and what is humanly possible, hence the morale, stress, and health problems they are increasingly experiencing. Clinical guidance programmes based on decision analysis represent the coming decision technology, and proactive adaptation will produce independent doctors who can deliver excellent evidence based and preference driven care while concentrating on the human aspects of the therapeutic relation, having been relieved of the unbearable burdens of knowledge and information processing currently laid on them. History is full of examples of the incumbents of dominant technologies preferring to die than to adapt, and medicine needs both learning and leadership if it is to avoid repeating this mistake.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11700381      PMCID: PMC1765759          DOI: 10.1136/qhc.0100059..

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Qual Health Care        ISSN: 0963-8172


  4 in total

1.  Decision analysis and the evaluation of decision technologies.

Authors:  J Dowie
Journal:  Qual Health Care       Date:  2001-03

2.  Distributed decision support using a web-based interface: prevention of sudden cardiac death.

Authors:  G D Sanders; C G Hagerty; F A Sonnenberg; M A Hlatky; D K Owens
Journal:  Med Decis Making       Date:  1999 Apr-Jun       Impact factor: 2.583

Review 3.  Towards the equitably efficient and transparently decidable use of public funds in the deep blue millennium.

Authors:  J Dowie
Journal:  Health Econ       Date:  1998-03       Impact factor: 3.046

Review 4.  'Evidence-based', 'cost-effective' and 'preference-driven' medicine: decision analysis based medical decision making is the pre-requisite.

Authors:  J Dowie
Journal:  J Health Serv Res Policy       Date:  1996-04
  4 in total

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