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CLINICAL REASONING in the Health Professions

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Title: CLINICAL REASONING in the Health Professions


1
CLINICAL REASONING in the Health Professions
Mark A. Jones BS (Psych), MAppSc (Manip Physio)
2
AIMS
  • Overview of Expertise in general
  • Overview of CR in the Health Professions
  • Common errors of CR
  • Overview of WHO model of Health and Disability
  • Overview of contemporary Pain Science and
    Psychosocial theory used in Health Professionals
    CR

3
Aspects of Expertise
  • Experts excel in their own domains
  • Experts possess large repertoire of well
    developed clinical patterns
  • Experts solve problems fast with little error
  • Experts see problems at a deeper level
  • Experts spend more time analysing problems
    qualitatively

4
Aspects of Expertise
  • Experts have strong self-monitoring skills
  • Experts possess the affective dispositions
    necessary to learn from their experiences

5
Aspects of Expertise
  • Experts value the participation of relevant
    others (patients, family, other heath prof)
  • Experts recognise the value of different forms of
    knowledge in their reasoning
  • Experts are patient centred
  • Patients viewed as active participants in therapy
  • A primary goal of care is empowerment of patients
    achieved through collaboration between patient
    and therapist
  • Strong moral commitment to beneficence or doing
    what is in the patients best interest
  • Willing to serve as a patient advocate or moral
    agent in helping them be successful

6
Aspects of Expertise
  • Experts use collaborative problem solving to help
    patients learn how to resolve their problems on
    their own, fostering self-efficacy and empowering
    them to take responsibility
  • Experts share their expertise to assist others
  • Experts communicate their reasoning well
  • Experts more sensitive to contextual cues as they
    are aware of their own mental processes, listen
    more attentively, are flexible, recognize bias
    and judgments and therefore act with compassion
    based on insight

7
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8
Clinical Reasoning
  • The thinking underlying clinical practice
  • Facilitates critique and use of popular fad
  • Without sound clinical reasoning, therapists
    become technicians
  • Reasoning facilitates life long learning
  • Incorporates pattern recognition and hypothesis
    testing

9
Clinical Patterns Include
  • Syndromes (symptoms, context of symptoms,
    physical signs)
  • Predisposing physical, psychosocial
    environmental circumstances
  • Precautions to examination and Rx
  • Associated ifthen management strategies
  • Prognosis

10
Clinical Patterns in Medical Radiation
  • Prototypical features of pathology on different
    imaging procedures plus Exemplar cases
  • Image critique
  • Image quality
  • Best angle
  • Other views
  • Recognising when further investigation is required

11
Inductive or Forward Reasoning
  • Problem cues elicit recognition of the solution
    without specific hypothesis testing
  • Used by experts when confronting familiar
    problems
  • Efficient, fast and dependent on a good knowledge
    base

12
Backward Reasoning
  • Hypotheses elicit a return to the data for either
    re-interpretation or collection of further
    confirming or negating evidence
  • Used by novices, and experts confronted with
    unfamiliar problems

13
Cognition
  • Thinking processes such as perception of relevant
    information, specific interpretations and higher
    level data analysis and synthesis
  • Inquiry strategies such as hypothesis testing
  • Cognitive skills and knowledge are interdependent
  • Errors in clinical reasoning often errors of
    cognition

14
Common Errors in Clinical Reasoning
  • Overemphasis on findings which support existing
    hypothesis
  • Misinterpreting non-contributory information as
    confirming existing hypothesis
  • Ignoring findings which do not support favoured
    hypothesis
  • Incorrect interpretations or deductions

15
Common Errors in Clinical Reasoning
  • Expert and resident radiologists given x-ray
    films and clinical history (normal,
    bronchiolitis) list features, estimate
    probability
  • When history biased to positive result both found
    more features and gave higher probability in BOTH
    abnormal and normal films
  • Early hypotheses can bias subsequent
    interpretations
  • Norman et al (1992a) The correlation of feature
    identification and category judgments in
    diagnostic radiology. Memory and Cognition, 20,
    344-355
  • Norman et al (1992b) Expertise in visual
    diagnosis A review of the literature. Academic
    Medicine, 67, S78-S83

16
Metacognition
  • Awareness and ability to think about your
    thinking
  • Ability to think (reflect) on your feet
  • Recognising what you know and what you dont know
  • Should lead to self-directed learning and life
    long learning

17
Knowledge
  • Expertise dependent on clinicians knowledge,
    especially their ORGANISATION OF KNOWLEDGE
  • Represents breadth and depth of your
    understandings and beliefs held together in
    patterns acquired through academia and personal
    experience
  • Three forms of knowledge essential

18
Three Forms of Knowledge Essential (Higgs
Titchen 1995)
  • Propositional knowledge knowing that
  • Biomedical, diagnostic/pathology focused textbook
    and research-based knowledge
  • Non-Propositional knowledge
  • Professional craft knowledge knowing how allows
    us to use propositional knowledge in practice
  • Personal knowledge knowledge acquired through
    life that shapes personal perspectives, beliefs
    and attitudes

19
Contemporary Understanding of Health and
Disability
  • Influence psychosocial factors have on patients
  • Cognitive and sensory perceptions
  • Motor programs
  • Health behaviours
  • Non-diagnostic reasoning critical to obtaining
    psychosocial profile
  • Application of learning theory integral to
    promoting change

20
WORLD HEALTH ORGANISATION MODEL OF HEALTH AND
DISABILITY (WHO 2001, p.18)
Health Condition (disorder or disease)
Body Functions Structures
Participation
Activities
Personal Factors
Environmental Factors
21
Mature Organism Model (Gifford 1998)
22
Mature Organism Model (Gifford 1998)
  • Like WHO model illustrates interactions between
    patients disorders, their environment and
    personal perspectives
  • Depicts interactions of fundamental pathways into
    and out of CNS that are necessary for
  • Survival
  • Maintenance of health
  • Development and continuation of poor health (e.g.
    activity and participation restrictions and
    associated impairments)

23
  • Tissue health sampled and communicated along with
    contextual information re environment via Input
    Mechanisms
  • Brain scrutinises (consciously unconsciously)
    incoming info with engrams of past experiences
    for Processing to the Output Mechanisms
    (somatic motor, autonomic, neuroendocrine,
    neuroimmune, descending pain control)

24
  • How persons health is manifest via output
    systems (cognitively, emotionally, behaviourally,
    physiologically) depends in part on
  • Contextual factors in persons immediate
    circumstances
  • Past experiences that contribute to shaping
    beliefs, attitudes, emotions and behaviours
  • Even with same extent of tissue injury or illness
    no two people have exactly same presentation as
    how they manifest their pain or illness is shaped
    in part by who they are

25
  • Input, processing and output mechanisms are
    always operating
  • Pinch ? (input) ? (processing where
    interpretation depends on context of pinch and
    past experiences) ? (output) ? pain, withdrawal,
    emotions, autonomic response (e.g. increase heart
    rate), local physiological response (erythema,
    bruise, etc.)
  • Clinicians need to learn clinical patterns of
    abnormal or maladaptive pain mechanisms

26
Applying a Biopsychosocial Model
  • Requires understanding patients individual
    perspectives or pain experiences
  • Input, Processing Output mechanisms not always
    dysfunctional
  • Even nociceptive dominant problems will co-exist
    with maladaptive psychosocial factors creating
    obstacles to recovery
  • Key is to learn clinical features representing
    maladaptive Input, Processing, Output

27
Hypothesis Categories
  • Activity and Participation capability/restriction
  • Patients perspectives on their experience
  • Pathobiological mechanisms
  • Physical impairments and associated
    structure/tissue sources
  • Contributing factors
  • Precautions contraindications P/E Rx
  • Management treatment
  • Prognosis

28
Activity and Participation Capability/Restriction
  • Activity restriction difficulties in performing
    activities (walking, lifting, etc.)
  • Participation restriction problems with
    involvement in life situations (caring for
    family, work, sport, etc.)
  • Essential to also recognise Capabilities
  • Restrictions often represent goals where
    capabilities provide point where retraining or
    reactivation must commence

29
Hypothesis Categories
  • Activity and Participation capability/restriction
  • Patients perspectives on their experience
  • Pathobiological mechanisms
  • Physical impairments and associated
    structure/tissue sources
  • Contributing factors
  • Precautions contraindications P/E Rx
  • Management treatment
  • Prognosis

30
Patients Perspectives on Their Experience
  • Understandings, beliefs, feelings, etc.
  • Can be barriers to their recovery
  • Therapists must develop skills to question and
    explore patients perspectives which they may
    even be unaware of
  • Important to know what the perspective is (e.g.
    pain harm therefore reduced activity) and the
    basis for that perspective (previous medical or
    family advice, past medical experiences, etc.)

31
Adapted From Main et al 2000

32

33
Blue Flags
  • Perceived features of work associated with
    higher rates of symptoms, ill-health, work loss
  • High demand and low control
  • Unhelpful management style
  • Poor social support from colleagues
  • Perceived time pressure
  • Lack of job satisfaction

34
Black Flags
  • National Policy
  • Rates of pay
  • Negotiated entitlements
  • Employer Policy
  • Sickness policy
  • Restricted duties policy
  • Management style
  • Organization size and structure
  • Trade union support
  • Content-specific aspects of work
  • Ergonomics
  • Hours, shift work

35
Hypothesis Categories
  • Activity and Participation capability/restriction
  • Patients perspectives on their experience
  • Pathobiological mechanisms
  • Physical impairments and associated
    structure/tissue sources
  • Contributing factors
  • Precautions contraindications P/E Rx
  • Management treatment
  • Prognosis

36
Pathobiological Mechanisms Tissue and Pain
Mechanisms
  • Tissue mechanisms tissue health and stages of
    tissue healing (inflammatory, proliferative,
    remodelling)
  • Pain mechanisms input, processing and output
    mechanisms underlying patients activity and
    participation restrictions, unhelpful
    perspectives and physical impariments

37
Input Mechanisms
  • Nociceptive Pain chemical and mechanical
    activation of nociceptors in local somatic
    tissues (ligaments/fascia, muscles, bone, etc.)
  • Peripherally Evoked Neurogenic Pain symptoms
    that originate from neural tissue outside the
    dorsal horn or cervicotrigeminal nucleus (nerve
    root pain, peripheral nerve entrapment)
  • Both have a predictable pattern (history,
    behaviour and progression)

38
Maladaptive Central Processing
  • Symptoms provoked from past injury can be
    maintained even after original injury healed
  • Symptoms no longer follow predictable nociceptive
    pattern
  • Symptoms out of proportion to impairment
  • Activity/participation restrictions out of
    proportion to symptoms and impairment
  • Symptom behaviour not consistent with
    psychosocial triggers common
  • Problem does not follow typical course of
    recovery or response to physical management

39
Maladaptive Output Mechanisms
  • Motor, Autonomic, Neuroendocrine, Immune
  • Maladaptive motor patterns from injury (pain
    inhibition) learning (through lifestyle)
  • Excessive sympathetic nervous system activity
    common in many chronic pain problems
  • Neuroendocrine system affected by stress with
    decreased healing increased sensitivity
  • Chronic pain, deconditioning stress interfere
    with immune system function

40
Hypothesis Categories
  • Activity and Participation capability/restriction
  • Patients perspectives on their experience
  • Pathobiological mechanisms
  • Physical impairments and associated
    structure/tissue sources
  • Contributing factors
  • Precautions contraindications P/E Rx
  • Management treatment
  • Prognosis

41
Physical Impairments Associated
Structures/Tissue Sources
  • Physical impairments specific regional
    neuromusculoskeletal abnormalities detected
    through physical examination (active and passive
    movements, soft tissue, motor control)
  • The associated structure/tissue sources refers to
    the actual structure/tissue the symptoms and
    signs are from
  • Clues available from Area, Behaviour, History
    with confirmation from Phys Exam Treatment

42
Physical Impairments Associated
Structures/Tissue Sources
  • Interpretations about specific sources must be
    made with reference to the dominant pain
    mechanism
  • Local tissue impairment accurate reflection of
    structures involved with Nociceptive and
    Peripheral Neurogenic patterns
  • False positives common with maladaptive central
    processing
  • Often not possible to diagnose exact
    structure/source (imaging may not correlate, not
    all pathology symptomatic)

43
Hypothesis Categories
  • Activity and Participation capability/restriction
  • Patients perspectives on their experience
  • Pathobiological mechanisms
  • Physical impairments and associated
    structure/tissue sources
  • Contributing factors
  • Precautions contraindications P/E Rx
  • Management treatment
  • Prognosis

44
Contributing Factors
  • Any predisposing or associated factors involved
    in the development or maintenance of the
    patients problem
  • Environmental
  • Psychosocial
  • Behavioural
  • Physical/biomechanical
  • Hereditary

45
Contributing Factors
  • Source
  • Inflamed subacromial bursa
  • Contributing Factor
  • Tight posterior capsule
  • Ineffective scapular rotators
  • Poor sporting technique, etc.
  • Source
  • Central nervous system (central pain)
  • Contributing Factor
  • Psychosocial factors

46
Hypothesis Categories
  • Activity and Participation capability/restriction
  • Patients perspectives on their experience
  • Pathobiological mechanisms
  • Physical impairments and associated
    structure/tissue sources
  • Contributing factors
  • Precautions contraindications P/E Rx
  • Management treatment
  • Prognosis

47
Precautions Contraindications to Physical
Examination Treatment
  • Determine extent of P/E and Treatment that may be
    undertaken safely
  • Determined by
  • Dominant pain mechanism
  • Stage of healing/recovery (local tissue)
  • Patients perspectives and expectations
  • Severity and irritability of the symptoms
  • Progression of the problem
  • Known pathology (RA, osteoporosis, cardio, etc.)
  • General health/medical status, age

48
Hypothesis Categories
  • Activity and Participation capability/restriction
  • Patients perspectives on their experience
  • Pathobiological mechanisms
  • Physical impairments and associated
    structure/tissue sources
  • Contributing factors
  • Precautions contraindications P/E Rx
  • Management treatment
  • Prognosis

49
Management Treatment
  • No recipes!
  • Specific treatment procedures and overall
    management must be based on
  • Clinical reasoning through subjective and
    physical
  • Ongoing reassessment of interventions
  • Management of contributing factors critical to
    minimise risk of reoccurrence
  • Patient understanding and active involvement
    critical to long term success

50
Hypothesis Categories
  • Activity and Participation capability/restriction
  • Patients perspectives on their experience
  • Pathobiological mechanisms
  • Physical impairments and associated
    structure/tissue sources
  • Contributing factors
  • Precautions contraindications P/E Rx
  • Management treatment
  • Prognosis

51
Prognosis
  • Determined by
  • Nature and extent of patients problem
  • Ability and willingness to make necessary changes
    to facilitate recovery (lifestyle, psychosocial,
    physical)
  • Clues available from
  • Patients perspectives and expectations
  • Extent of activity/participation restrictions
  • Extent of physical impairments
  • Social, occupational and economic status

52
Prognosis
  • Clues available from
  • Dominant pain mechanisms present
  • Stage of tissue healing
  • Irritability of the disorder
  • Length of history and progression of disorder
  • Patients general health, age and pre-existing
    disorders
  • Useful to consider list of Positives and
    Negatives
  • Helpful to review decision every few appointments

53
Diagnostic versus Narrative Reasoning
54
Acquisition of Expertise is a Long Process
  • Master chess player estimated to have 50,000
    configurations of chess stored in memory
  • How many clinical patterns to expert
    physiotherapists have?
  • Estimated to take 10 years professional
    experience to become an expert but not all
    physiotherapists become experts in 10 years
  • No short cut to expertise, but improving your
    clinical reasoning will help!
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