| Literature DB >> 33588616 |
Paul K J Han1,2, Tania D Strout2,3, Caitlin Gutheil1,2, Carl Germann2,3, Brian King2,4, Eirik Ofstad5,6, Pål Gulbrandsen7,8, Robert Trowbridge2,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Medical uncertainty is a pervasive and important problem, but the strategies physicians use to manage it have not been systematically described.Entities:
Keywords: management; taxonomy; tolerance; uncertainty
Year: 2021 PMID: 33588616 PMCID: PMC7985858 DOI: 10.1177/0272989X21992340
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Decis Making ISSN: 0272-989X Impact factor: 2.583
Participant Characteristics[a]
|
| % | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||
| Female | 8 | 36 |
| Male | 14 | 64 |
| Race | ||
| White/Caucasian | 22 | 100 |
| Other | 0 | 0 |
| Specialty | ||
| Emergency medicine | 9 | 41 |
| Internal medicine | 7 | 32 |
| Internal medicine–pediatrics | 2 | 9 |
| N/A (medical student) | 4 | 18 |
| Professional role | ||
| Attending physician | 11 | 50 |
| Resident physician (PGY1–3) | 7 | 32 |
| Medical student (MS-4) | 4 | 18 |
| Posttraining experience (y) | ||
| 0 (medical students and residents) | 11 | 50 |
| 1–10 | 6 | 27 |
| >10 | 4 | 23 |
PGY, postgraduate year; MS-4, fourth-year medical student; N/A, not applicable.
Participant quotations throughout the text are identified by specialty and training level, using the following abbreviations: specialty: EM (emergency medicine), IM (internal medicine), IMP (internal medicine–pediatrics); training level: A (attending), R (resident), MS (medical student).
Uncertainty Management Strategies[a]
| General Strategy | Specific Strategy | Illustrative Quotes |
|---|---|---|
| Ignorance-focused | Initiating diagnostic evaluation | Well, everybody comes in uncertain in our world. . . . And so then you tease that through history taking, physical exam, and then testing . . . your uncertainty goes down as you get more and more data back. (EM-A-18) |
| Instituting therapeutic trials | A lot of the times in primary care or less acute situations, you can be uncertain and you probably are at times, but the stakes might not be that high. You have the time and the relationship with the patient to try different things over time. And if one thing works, great, and if it doesn’t then you prescribe one antihypertensive medication and you see if it works. And you bring them back in 3 or 4 weeks and you check it again and you’re like, okay, I was uncertain about that choice, but let’s try again. (MS-21) | |
| Consulting with colleagues | But then I think ultimately in most academic centers, there’s always someone to bounce the idea off of and help take away your uncertainty. But even if you’ve exhausted your possibility of taking away uncertainty through testing and imaging or diagnostics, you can always in an academic center generally bounce what the case has been up to that point off a colleague . . . that certainly helps people I think in terms of feeling better about what uncertainty they have left after completing a workup. (MS-19) | |
| Searching the medical literature | And then implicitly you sort of just run into that all the time as a learner who is trying to understand what’s happening with your patients in facing uncertainty and doing research to try and minimize that as much as you possibly can. And by research I mean reading. (MS-22) | |
| Uncertainty-focused | Maximizing attention | So it’s stressful, and it probably interferes with your work with other patients, because you’re not really thinking about anything else other than that particular patient in that case at that moment. And I’m someone who kind of like needs to quote “finish” that case before I can really mentally engage in anything else. So I’m sort of just perseverating on all the things and possibilities I can be considering or missing or whatever until it just gets settled. But it’s all consuming I would say. . . . In any way, I rethink and think through everything over and over. It’s almost like a cycle where you just cycle, cycle, cycle through, until you’re sure there’s nothing else you could have done or do differently at the moment. (EM-A-13) |
| Well, I think one thing I do is I double-check. So I don’t—when I go home at night I review all my charts again. So I don’t just stop work at the end of the day, hang up my stethoscope and then come back in the next day. I tend to go back over things in the evenings and that gives me a fresh perspective sometimes. It also helps you stay on top of things, of course. But I think that second check is very useful. (IM-A-7) | ||
| Minimizing attention | So to be able to focus my attention once there’s—or not focus my attention on things that can’t be undone. I made a decision, regardless of the consequences. Having the mental flexibility to say, from an emotional standpoint, I’m not going to focus on this anymore because there’s nothing I can do about it. (MS-21) | |
| Disengaging from uncertainty | I think from an intellectual standpoint, if you can remove yourself emotionally from it, it’s really valuable to be able to go back through decisions and learn from them. But it’s hard to do that if you haven’t separated from it emotionally. (MS-21) | |
| Adjusting epistemic expectations | There’s always going to be things that you haven’t been exposed to. And the frequency with which you encounter those will decrease over time. And then you can’t read everything in the world. So there’s always going to be that. And then patients present with things that may not be clear to anybody based on a thorough workup and everything like that sometimes, there’s just no very good answer for what is going on with a patient. (MS-22) | |
| Ordering uncertainty | So having sort of a mind to take uncertainty and to try to break it down into a risk-benefit analysis is what I think is the best way for me to, I guess deal with it. But it’s something that I really enjoy is having that risk-benefit analysis going on in my mind. (MS-19) | |
| Response-focused | Withstanding negative effects | I think those are the situations where it starts to gnaw, and that’s the patient you think about when you’re done with a shift or when you get home at night. That’s when it becomes much more challenging to—because if you’ve exhausted your ability to mitigate the uncertainty, then you’re left with that. And nobody, that’s very human to not want to leave something unaddressed like that. And the only thing I can think of is just perspective, and that I think particularly for emergency medicine, the one tool that frequently can’t be used to mitigate uncertainty is time. And sometimes it takes time for a disease to declare itself, or something to change in the way that takes away uncertainty for the patient or for the provider. The encounters are short. You’re only seeing that patient over the course of hours in one day. So having the perspective to say that this patient might need time, the one thing I can’t use to address their concerns and this uncertainty. (MS-19) |
| Cultivating virtue | But you do run into situations where you’re not going to make a slam dunk diagnosis. And if I really have done my due diligence and I still—we just don’t—it’s a clinical situation where for what we have available, we cannot say yes or no with some sort of certainty, then I feel okay about that. But I make sure to do due diligence to get to that point. (IM-R-14) | |
| Compartmentalizing psychological responses | You can learn to compartmentalize. You can learn to focus your attention on, okay, I’ve made a decision even though I wasn’t certain in my ability to make it or whether it was right. It’s been made and now I have to see where the result is and know . . . I think you can learn to focus your attention and compartmentalize your feelings based off, you know, separate that from your analytical decision making. . . . I think certainly for me as an individual exercise and meditation are things that I use to help me compartmentalize emotionally. (MS-21) | |
| Self-affirmation | Yeah, I think from the beginning of intern year to now, I think that I’ve become much more okay with uncertainty and definitely okay with uncertainty and even the mistakes that I’ve made. . . . I literally last night was talking to one of the hospitalists who is a few years older than me. Two years ahead of me, rather, and I was like, “Did you ever discharge someone and then you realize 5 days later that you should have done something different?” She’s like, “All the time. I do that all the time.” And just that little thing kind of makes you feel better. (IM-R-1) | |
| Self-forgiveness | So I think I stopped really caring as much about what the patients think . . . because I don’t think it’s based on clinical competencies . . . so a good example is being an intern on nights is like the prime example of this. When you’re making these decisions and you know that the day team is going to judge you on those decisions. And it’s really kind of scary where you’re like, “Wow, I hope that they think I’m smart. I hope they don’t think that I don’t know what I’m doing.” And I think it just gets a little bit easier. I found that as I’ve grown too, I felt like I’m a little bit more confident, and I don’t care as much about if the people that are accepting the patients that I admit or the people who are going to see the decisions that I’ve made overnight, I don’t know if I—I still care what they think, but I don’t care as much, I guess. . . . But sometimes, I can’t do anything and I think my way of coping is just, “Well, you know, we did the best we could, but that was beyond my control.” So I don’t feel that as hard as I think some other people feel, like deaths that were completely just luck and it had nothing to do with medical care. . . . So it’s one of those things that I think if you beat yourself up for every mistake, you’ll never be able to get through it. And I think as a medical student, a lot of medical students beat themselves up over every mistake, but you get to the point in residency where you just can’t do that. (IM-R-1) | |
| Relationship-focused | Sharing with colleagues | It’s for the learning, too. But it’s probably more for the emotional support. And to hear how they would have handled it and to see if it’s any different. But I think you’re hoping, you’re kind of hoping that they would have done it similarly, to be honest. You really are, if that makes sense. So there is a learning part, but it’s yeah, its part. Does that make sense? (IM-R-15) |
| Sharing with patients | At the end of the day, you need to be able to communicate that with the patient. Like, hey, say we’ve done a bunch of tests and we’ve tried to do all these things to figure it out and we haven’t, you need to sort of establish with the patient that it’s not exactly clear what’s going on. And that your effort has been to understand that and especially to rule out the most concerning things that we have a test for. And so you sort of communicate the uncertainty but also try and sort of demonstrate that you’ve done a thorough workup and that the most concerning things that you might find that haven’t been found, at least it’s reassuring that that’s the case. (MS-22) | |
| I think finding ways to have that conversation with a patient or family about the fact that I am uncertain and what the consequences of that uncertainty—what the range of consequences are, and try to bring them into the conversation so I can share some of that decision making with the patient and family and not carry it solely on my shoulders. . . . And then I’m still uncertain what’s the matter with the patient, but we’ve had some shared decision making on what to do with that uncertainty and how to play that out for the patient. So they’ve taken some ownership in that. And it doesn’t get me off the hook. I’m still the doctor, but emotionally, it discharges some of the anxiety that I may have had going into the room before. (EM-A-4) |
Participant quotations identified by specialty and training level, using the following abbreviations: specialty: EM (emergency medicine), IM (internal medicine), IMP (internal medicine–pediatrics); training level: A (attending), R (resident), MS (medical student).
Figure 1Physicians’ uncertainty management strategies: conceptual taxonomy.
Key Capacities in the Evolution of Physicians’ Uncertainty Tolerance[a]
| Key Capacity | Illustrative Quotes |
|---|---|
| Epistemic maturity | I think another piece is that, being in the game this long, you realize that it’s okay to not have the answers, even though it’s uncomfortable, but it’s okay, and sometimes you just have to live with it. Whereas, as a med student or an intern, you’re kind of like, “Oh I wish,” you’re accustomed to the board answer, like, “Oh, there’s an answer to everything.” You realize that there isn’t. (IM-R-2) |
| I think earlier, at least in my career, it was very stressful. But the more you practice medicine, the more you realize how much uncertainty is involved with everything that we do, the more comfortable I’ve become with it. And when you first start, at least when I first started practicing medicine, the uncertainty that patients and their family felt was very stressful to me because I didn’t have enough experience to tell them in broad strokes what to expect. So now, I see the same kind of uncertainty over and over—patients and their families, and I can give them better advice about what’s going to happen. Not necessarily specific events but broad strokes about how things are going to go, and I can say that with confidence and with ease. And I think that puts people and their families at ease, if that makes sense. (EM-A-4) | |
| Humility | I used to think that anytime a patient complained about me, they were just a complainer and that I was perfect and they were always wrong. And I think those were my younger years, and I think I’ve come to realize no, I do make mistakes and that patient was probably right. . . . And I think the humility that I’ve learned over time has helped me have those conversations, accept my less-than-perfect state of knowledge as a physician, and so consequently have conversations around uncertainty that kind of make me feel a little more relaxed that we’re moving ahead in a way that we all agree is probably the best for the patient. And that’s come over time with me, and it’s come as a result of feedback from colleagues and patients. I guess in my life outside of medicine as a father and a spouse, you go through life crises with your children and your spouse and you learn from those things, too. And it all, I think has made me be a better listener and not so much thinking that I have all the answers. (EM-A-4) |
| Yeah, I think that you really have to be humble when you’re a doctor. . . . You have to know when you don’t know what’s going on and have to know when to ask for help. . . . So I think that you have to be flexible and reflect on your own abilities as you practice and be willing to say, you know, “I don’t know what’s going here. We need to figure this out.” When I first started practicing as an attending, if the resident said something that I’d never heard about, I would be more apt to sort of go along with it because I thought I should know that. But now, I will say, “I don’t know what you’re talking about. Teach me what you’re saying,” or “I’ll have to look that up, or before I make that management decision on the patient I need to understand this part for myself.” So I think the number one strategy is self-awareness and appreciation that you just can’t know everything. (EM-A-5) | |
| “Oh, this is the way to figure out someone’s stroke risk in A-fib. Here’s this equation called CHADSVASC” . . . we plug in all these variables. We get a number and we turn to the patient and say, “Well here’s this likelihood of a stroke.” And it feels really like a really mathematical experience. You know, somebody is in A-fib, you pull out your iPad, you get the App. You put it in CHADSVASC, you get a number, then you can turn to the patient and say, “This is a validated equation and we can tell you based on this that your annual risk of stroke is blah, bah, dee blub, and with that information we advise or recommend you look at the risk benefit of like you know, anticoagulation.” And it’s a beautiful thing because without an equation, I think we’re all sort of, it’s disorganized and there are loose strings. And so you can say, we can use a body of research in literature to help us validate the numerical score. And I think in that way, we sometimes get really certain about it. But then a year or 2 from now, you say, we’ve researched it, we realize there’s this other part of the equation that needs to go in there. And there’s this other thing where you apply the equation. It’s like screening. Where you apply a mammogram to a certain population. The certainty of the risk of something depends on who you apply it on. So I think sometimes, we have this false sense of certainty with certain tests that the inherent nature of the test or the way we’re applying the test, we think they’re more absolute tools than they are. (IM-A-9) | |
| Flexibility | I think maybe from my vantage point now, I would say I guess the more mature and experienced I became, the more I realized that I underestimated, was maybe a bit naïve in thinking that clinical practice would have these relevant definitive arenas of black and white and very statistically quantitative processes. And then the more I got into it, the more I realized there’s more gray, and that even when we try to quantify things and create almost mathematical approaches, they’re not always as certain as we would think. And so that the uncertainty to me has become more interesting over my practice, over my career. And it’s helped me shift more from the science to the art. Because I think then the art is acknowledging the uncertainty and then making the practice of medicine be basically accounting for the uncertainty and applying it to an individual, which is kind of the art, so it’s really, with all the different things that are uncertain about the clinical element, maybe a diagnosis or treatment or prognosis, what you can do is say, “Yeah, there’s gonna be an uncertainty here.” And so where we aren’t certain, we give the patient information, help them make their choice, and make it more of a personalized element. So I think the more I realize there’s uncertainty—part of you wants to get rid of uncertainty. Like, “Well let’s get a better equation.” But then, I think another part of me says it is what it is. We’re gonna probably at least have some degree of it. And so, you kind of have to embrace it and then say, how do you bring it to your practice? How do you bring uncertainty to patients and help—I think we like to think we’re helping them with it, but I think sometimes we’re helping ourselves as much as we’re helping them. (IM-A-9) |
| Openness | I think just the fact that we don’t know anything—the fact that you don’t know everything can go both ways. Like people can just do a lot better than we expect, even though they could do a lot worse than we expect. I think that can be kind of nice of the doctor, even if the people are still frustrated. . . . But I don’t know, I think there’s just an element of uncertainty in medicine, like we don’t know everything. And I see doctors who think they know everything, they’re often probably know less than most other doctors. So I think it’s as important to remember like there’s a lot of stuff in medicine you can’t control, and I’m not sure I would call it miracles or whatever, but there is stuff that happens that you see, you’re like this is crazy, like, you should not have lived. All the data says you shouldn’t have lived, and you did. And I don’t know why, but it’s awesome. So I think that uncertainty can be good too. (MS-20) |
Participant quotations are identified by specialty and training level, using the following abbreviations: specialty: EM (emergency medicine), IM (internal medicine), IMP (internal medicine–pediatrics); training level: A (attending), R (resident), MS (medical student).
Figure 2Normative goals of uncertainty management: key capacities.