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Knowledge, Experience, Reality, and Wisdom

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Techne approaches CHF ... Techne continues with CHF ... CHF admission in the ER ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Knowledge, Experience, Reality, and Wisdom


1
Knowledge, Experience, Reality, and Wisdom
  • Some Implications for Medicine
  • Myles N. Sheehan, S.J., M.D.
  • Loyola University Chicago Stritch School of
    Medicine

2
Goals
  • Use Critical Realism as a way to provide a set of
    frames for educators to deepen their
    understanding of medical knowledge
  • Consider the problems of realism in our culture
    that often denies reality

3
Objectives
  • Recognize limitations of standard methods of
    evaluation of medical knowledge in assessing the
    competency of learners
  • Describe stages of acquiring medical knowledge,
    pitfalls, and promise
  • Explain the meaning of terms techne, phronesis,
    sophia in light of the maturation process of
    clinicians
  • Identify an approach based on critical realism in
    forming trainees as they grow in medical knowledge

4
Pitfalls
  • Using philosophy and Greek terms can easily be
    construed as pompous and self-promoting rather
    than a genuine way to think more deeply and
    understand

5
Some aphorisms to lay the groundwork
  • Theres nothing more dangerous than a medical
    student at the end of his/her third year
  • She knows what she does not knowand then
    figures it outgreat resident.
  • After twenty years of practice, I recognized how
    little I knew despite being quite current in the
    literature, up on the evidence, and skilled in my
    specialty

6
What do you know?
  • Heparinizing a GI bleeder whose intravenous lipid
    formula accidentally was bolused when a clamp
    broke, leading to respiratory distress
  • Who knew about heparin induced induction of
    lipoprotein lipase?
  • Who knew about heparinizing an actively bleeding
    person?

7
Grounding in reality
  • Jacques Maritain 1886-1963
  • Realist versus idealist
  • I am, therefore I think NOT I think, therefore
    I am.
  • Reality is situated in the experience of being
    ideas are not real in and of themselves

8
So what?
  • Approach to the Patient With CHF
  • No such person
  • Disease as the biomedical grid we place on the
    experience of personsthat experience is called
    illness. (Kleinman)
  • Sweeping ideas and idealized constructs are not
    unique to medicinejust think of some of the
    unreflective approaches to cultural competence.

9
Ideas remain important?
  • Ideas and knowledge organized theoretically
    provide a way to begin to map the territory of
    reality
  • We can meet a person with CHF without any
    knowledge of CHF and miss a lot
  • We need to have an understanding of the
    pathophysiology of CHF and still recognize the
    person who has the illness
  • Thats what medical knowledge is about

10
Knowledge, skills, attitudes
  • Not sure this tripartite division works as neatly
    as it might seem
  • Knowledge as a skill that grows depending on
    ones attitude
  • Techne, phronesis, sophia
  • Hubris and humility

11
Dreyfus Model of Skill Acquisition
  • Three transitions
  • From working on the basis of abstract
    principles to working on the basis of past
    concrete experiences
  • From seeing situations as composed of equally
    relevant bits to discerning situations as
    complete wholes with certain relevant parts
  • From acting and knowing as a detached observer to
    acting and knowing as an involved participant
  • (from Dartmouth Medical School c 1996)

12
Dreyfus Model, continued
  • Novice
  • Advanced beginner
  • Competent
  • Proficient
  • Expert
  • Master

13
Techne
  • Knows physiology and pathophysiology
  • Has a basic grounding in history taking and
    physical diagnosis
  • Has a basic understanding of pharmacology

14
Techne approaches CHF
  • A disease characterized by inability of heart to
    pump enough blood to meet the needs of the body
  • This can be because of excessive need or a
    problem with the heart
  • Excessive need would be because of
    hyperthyroidism, anemia, blood loss

15
Techne continues with CHF
  • Heart problem can be with left ventricle, right
    ventricle, or both, it can be caused by problems
    in systole or diastole
  • There is a differential diagnosis for the cause
    of the heart problems
  • Systolic Heart failure is manifest usually by
    edema, pulmonary congestion, and an extra heart
    sound (S3)
  • It is treated with a diuretic, an ACEI, and
    digoxinmaybe spironolactonemaybe beta blocker.

16
Techne meets Mr. Jones
  • CC, HPI, PMH, SH, FH, ROS, PE, Labs, Rays, AP
  • 70 yo man with history of two previous MIs
    presents with worsening SOB, DOE, weight gain,
    and edema with exam showing tachycardia,
    tachypnea, rales, gallop, edema.

17
Phronesis and Mr. Jones
  • CHF admission in the ER
  • Want to get a troponin, CK, and CXR in the ER,
    check ECG, get an O2 sat, see if sick enough for
    unit consult
  • Admit to tele, r/o MI, schedule echo, diurese,
    cards consult, consider cath
  • After above, dig, ACEI, continue diuretics,
    discharge in 48 hrs

18
Sophia and Mr. Jones
  • Knows the need to work him up and discharge him
    rapidly
  • Wonders how the frail wife will cope and if the
    meds can be paid for
  • Knows the residents plans are good, but not sure
    if the patient will comply
  • Expect that Mr. Jones will initially do well but
    wonders if he can live with his illness and
    change his life

19
A series of frames of experience
  • Basic issues of disease
  • The issues of hospital management
  • The person with the illness and the circumstances
    of his life
  • A life in a family with or without resources
  • A family in a culture that expects cures,
    comfort, certainty, and service
  • A world where tears are still part of the nature
    of things

20
Implications for learner growth
  • Developing the skill of knowledge is the
    ability to grow in understanding of detail while
    grounding it in the reality of a person, the
    system/s of care, the culture (local and larger)
  • Wisdom and mastery is manifest by recognition of
    multiple shifting variables that limits ones
    knowledge, recognizes the provisional nature of
    medical decisions, and often the uncomfortable
    feeling that one is not doing enough

21
Growth in knowledge
  • Nothing wrong with technical knowledge or
    practical wisdom.
  • Over-reliance on these as the ideal is dangerous
    and leads to mistakes in the grounded reality of
    individual patients
  • Mastery and wisdom recognize how many things are
    uncontrollable and shifting and seeks to provide
    the best care for the person realizing best may
    not always be clear

22
Art or science?
  • A false dichotomy often claimed by those who are
    incompetentlack both techne and phronesis
  • Evidence and best practices are always based on
    populations
  • It takes humility, command of the knowledge base,
    and clinical skill to apply it to a person

23
Growth in knowledge suggests growth in engagement
  • When the developmental stage of competence is
    reached, it is said to be accompanied by a
    qualitatively different kind of emotionality and
    sense of responsibilityIn a situation where
    postulants and novices were untouched at any deep
    emotional level, our experts were affected
    deeplyTheir sense of responsibility played a
    part in their feelings as well. Expert
    teachers, apparently like other experts, show
    more emotionality about their successes and
    failures in their work. David Berliner. The
    Development of Expertise in Pedagogy. 1988, p. 19

24
Wisdom in a foolish age
  • Disease is situated in a person
  • A person is cared for in a particular system
  • That persons care is influenced by bio-, psycho,
    and social considerationslike family
  • The person, family, exist in a larger culture
  • That culture despises mortality, uncertainty, an
    inability to control and fix.
  • Can mean the best doctors can carry a lot of
    conflict

25
Critical reality and formation of physicians
  • Much written and spoken criticizing physicians
  • Little written or said about the reality of an
    impossible task
  • The impossibility comes from the lack of ability
    to keep what are in our culture implied promises
    and expectations of perfection, cure for all
    disease, global sensitivity, and omniscience.

26
Implications
  • A culture that despises complexity,
    provisionality, and mortality can create the
    hidden curriculum for medical knowledge
  • The hidden curriculum of students and residents
    often reflects a marked preference for technical
    knowledgeif you know the facts you can avoid
    the reality
  • Evaluations on exams can reinforce the false
    notion that the ideal is the real and reality is
    not to be explored

27
A puzzle
  • I feel deeply frustrated by suggestions to demand
    more developmentally out of our trainees than
    anyone could expect from individuals mainly in
    20s and early 30s.
  • I also recognize the need to face the multiple
    failings of how physicians can interact with
    patients
  • It is easy to overwhelm those growing in the
    skill of knowledge when confronted with the
    reality based expectations and the unreal
    expectations of those who seek care and their
    families

28
A puzzle (continued)
  • How does one encourage continued growth in the
    reality of complexity as experienced in the care
    of patients while maintaining excellent technical
    and practical levels of knowledge?
  • How does one avoid overwhelming the developing
    learner with layers of detail?

29
A need for role models
  • Students and physicians have their own experience
    of reality
  • Limiting that experience to clinical facts and
    treatments provides a measure of safety for them
    that is bad for those they treat
  • Opening up to the wider world of knowing a
    patient is dangerous and hard and takes time
  • Need physician guides who are wise to help out
    and lead people to grow

30
Importance of those who form students and
residents
  • Need role models, not someone who just gets a
    salary in between grants
  • Need role models, not simply old war horses
  • Need role models who are exemplary in technical
    and practical wisdom and have the wisdom to show
    others the importance of facing a complicated
    reality rather than settling for the illusionary
    ideal of medical knowledge

31
Summary
  • Medical knowledge is a skill improved with
    deepening experience
  • It has layers of technical knowledge, practical
    or common sense, as well as wisdom
  • Facing the multiple facets of the lived
    experience of those persons whom we care for
    involves all these layers
  • Limiting medical knowledge to the technical and
    practical exchanges critical reality for an ideal
    that does not exist

32
Summary
  • An ideal of medical knowledge that does not
    confront reality provides protection from the
    difficulty of practicing in a very challenging
    world
  • It derives from the unreality of our larger
    American culture that favors the technical over
    the personal, the easier answer over the right,
    the promise of a cure over the promise of caring
    and healing when cure is not possible

33
Summary
  • The challenge of those who form physicians is to
    allow them to grow and deepen their knowledge
    while recognizing this is a process and not a
    moment
  • Careful attention to those who do the formation
    suggests the need to select masters who are
    respected by students and residents while also
    willing to allow the complexity of reality to be
    part of the knowledge they impart.
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