Reflexivity and metapositions: strategies for appraisal of clinical evidence.

According to Sackett, evidence-based medicine is the conscientious, explicit and judicious use of current best evidence in making decisions about the care of the individual patient. In this article, clinical reasoning is depicted as multilayered processes of evidence construction by means of social interaction and human interpretation. A basic set of knowledge is the doctors initial capital at the onset of the individual encounter. This is a necessary, but insufficient, presumption for the elaboration of clinical knowledge required to solve the particular problem. A diagnostic conclusion may appear to constitute the most obvious part of knowledge. Yet the formulation of hypotheses and the choice of adequate strategies for the pursuit of evidence are perhaps even more significant dimensions of clinical knowledge. Potential biases affect the ways in which evidence is gathered and used. When clinicians are not committed to appraising the evidence constituting the foundations of their enterprise, quality assessment of clinical practice becomes casual and unreliable. Reflexivity implies having a self-conscious account of the production of knowledge as it is being produced. From metapositions, critical questions can be asked and sometimes answered. Evidence-based practice in the original sense requires that doctors reflect upon their own positions as knowers, in the process of situated knowing, where certain rhetorical spaces rule.

[1]  B. Charlton,et al.  New perspectives in the evidence-based healthcare debate. , 2000, Journal of evaluation in clinical practice.

[2]  C Melchiorri,et al.  Recent developments in the evidence-based healthcare debate. , 2001, Journal of evaluation in clinical practice.

[3]  J Nessa,et al.  About signs and symptoms: Can semiotics expand the view of clinical medicine? , 1996, Theoretical medicine.

[4]  A. Miles,et al.  Evidence-based medicine: why all the fuss? This is why. , 1997, Journal of evaluation in clinical practice.

[5]  K. Malterud,et al.  The legitimacy of clinical knowledge: Towards a medical epistemology embracing the art of medicine , 1995, Theoretical medicine.

[6]  E Gatens-Robinson,et al.  Clinical judgment and the rationality of the human sciences. , 1986, The Journal of medicine and philosophy.

[7]  K. Malterud Symptoms as a source of medical knowledge: understanding medically unexplained disorders in women. , 2000, Family medicine.

[8]  Kirsti Malterud,et al.  For Personal Use. Only Reproduce with Permission from the Lancet Publishing Group. the Nature of Clinical Knowledge the Art and Science of Clinical Knowledge: Evidence beyond Measures and Numbers Qualitative Research Series , 2022 .

[9]  M. C. Peterson,et al.  Contributions of the history, physical examination, and laboratory investigation in making medical diagnoses. , 1992, The Western journal of medicine.

[10]  The Role of Some Nonbiomedical Parameters in Clinical Decision Making: An Ethnographic Approach , 1991 .

[11]  The (Gendered) Construction of Diagnosis Interpretation of Medical Signs in Women Patients , 1999, Theoretical medicine and bioethics.

[12]  B. Bornstein,et al.  Rationality in medical decision making: a review of the literature on doctors' decision-making biases. , 2001, Journal of evaluation in clinical practice.

[13]  A. Tversky,et al.  Judgment under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases , 1974, Science.

[14]  R. Epstein,et al.  Calibrating the Physician: Personal Awareness and Effective Patient Care , 1997 .

[15]  I R McWhinney,et al.  'An acquaintance with particulars...'. , 1989, Family medicine.

[16]  L. Jordanova The social construction of medical knowledge. , 1995, Social history of medicine : the journal of the Society for the Social History of Medicine.

[17]  A. Round,et al.  Introduction to clinical reasoning , 2000, BMJ.

[18]  Elizabeth C. Hirschman,et al.  Judgment under Uncertainty: Heuristics and Biases , 1974, Science.

[19]  T. Andersen The reflecting team: dialogue and meta-dialogue in clinical work. , 1987, Family process.

[20]  D. Leder,et al.  Clinical interpretation: The hermeneutics of medicine , 1990, Theoretical medicine.

[21]  R. Epstein,et al.  Calibrating the physician. Personal awareness and effective patient care. Working Group on Promoting Physician Personal Awareness, American Academy on Physician and Patient. , 1997, JAMA.

[22]  A. Miles,et al.  Advancing the evidence-based healthcare debate. , 1999, Journal of evaluation in clinical practice.

[23]  Reflexivity--a strategy for a patient-centred approach in general practice. , 2000, Family practice.

[24]  K. Malterud Qualitative research: standards, challenges, and guidelines , 2001, The Lancet.

[25]  Medicine as interpretation: the uses of literary metaphors and methods. , 1987, The Journal of medicine and philosophy.

[26]  S. Buetow,et al.  Evidence-based medicine: the need for a new definition. , 2000, Journal of evaluation in clinical practice.

[27]  D C Slawson,et al.  Clinical jazz: harmonizing clinical experience and evidence-based medicine. , 1998, The Journal of family practice.

[28]  A. Miles,et al.  Recent progress in health services research: on the need for evidence-based debate. , 1998, Journal of evaluation in clinical practice.

[29]  Ross Upshur Seven characteristics of medical evidence. , 2000, Journal of evaluation in clinical practice.

[30]  S. Buetow Ma PhD and,et al.  Evidence-based medicine: the need for a new definition , 2001 .

[31]  C H McGuire,et al.  Medical problem-solving: a critique of the literature. , 1985, Journal of medical education.