| Literature DB >> 35528309 |
Eva Lukšaitė1, Rosemary A Fricker1, Robert K McKinley1, Lisa Dikomitis1.
Abstract
Introduction: Certainty/uncertainty in medicine is a topic of popular debate. This study aims to understand how biomedical uncertainty is conceptualised by academic medical educators and how it is taught in a medical school in the UK.Entities:
Keywords: Biomedicine; Interviews; Medical curriculum; Qualitative research; Situated knowledge
Year: 2022 PMID: 35528309 PMCID: PMC9055000 DOI: 10.1007/s40670-021-01481-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Sci Educ ISSN: 2156-8650
Characteristics of respondents
| R1 | M | Microbiology, infectious diseases | 13 |
| R2 | F | Anatomy, histology | 1 |
| R3 | F | Immunology | 6 |
| R4 | M | Physiology | 8 |
| R5 | F | Muscle biology | 1 |
| R6 | M | Pharmacology, physiology | 15 |
| R7 | M | Cell biology | 4 |
Examples of biomedical uncertainty in observed teaching sessions
| Renal physiology, Y1 | The paradigm shift in the understanding of the role of the kidney in plasma pH regulation |
| Genes and the basis of genetic medicine, Y1 | The still-evolving understanding of a ‘gene’ from a single strand of DNA coding a single protein to a dispersed entity with multiple functions, which is still not fully understood |
| Pain physiology and pharmacology, Y2 | We still do not know why the body changes from physiological to pathological pain |
| Human reproduction, Y1 | The evidence base for the management of infertility is not as strong as one might think |
| Neurobiology of pain, Y2 | Functions of nociceptors are currently poorly understood |
Interview extracts of discipline-specific conceptualisations of biomedical uncertainty
| Microbiology | ‘Prescribing guidelines change in response to development of reduced sensitivity to drugs that we would use previously. That occurs, as I said, in a temporal fashion through time, but also within geographical areas, within healthcare trusts, those things change, and they can change quickly. So whereas prescribing guidelines for certain drugs may take years to change, those for antimicrobials can sometimes change in a matter of months.’ (R1) |
| Immunology | ‘There are certain fundamental core concepts in immunology that we've had nailed down for several years, but otherwise, you could go month to month and new things are discovered […]. When I learned it how many years ago, I was taught about two types of T cells. Now when I started teaching here (5 years ago), I was talking to them about three types. Now we're up to four, five, six different types of T cells. Next year who knows how many different things there might be. It is an area that’s constantly evolving, constantly being researched.’ (R3) |
| Anatomy I | ‘You can look for variations in the configurations of arteries or of nerves, and so what’s happened in anatomy is that a lot of this variation and uncertainty has actually been kind of condensed into we expect this, this is our normal anatomy. But I think it’s very unlikely that anyone in the world has the whole normal anatomy, because there are so many variations to muscles and arteries and nerves and brains that I don’t think anyone has, from beginning to end, what the textbook says they have.’ (R2) |
| Anatomy II | ‘You’ll see these things occasionally where suddenly people discover a new organ and this is made a lot of in the newspapers, so most recently it was the interstitium. […] So that has recently been designated by someone an organ. Now if that will remain an organ or if that were shouted down, that’s a different thing. But we’ve known for a substantial period of time that there was this interstitial fluid, but then the designation as an organ is fairly recent. And another example from a few years before that, we’ve discovered a new organ and what it was it was the mesentery. […] And this was recently designated an organ. And all the news stories sounded very much like humans have just discovered this thing. And it’s like well, we’ve always known that’s there, and it’s always had a name, it’s just now we’ve decided it’s an organ.’ (R2) |
| Physiology | ‘We know how a heart attack works, but how it’s triggered is different, so some things, the pathology stays the same, but the mechanism leading to that will change. There are things where it’s a bit of both, that basically some parts of these things are static. We know the answer or we’re pretty certain we know the answer, we just don't know how that happens, and it depends on the level of detail that we’re going into. (R4)’ |