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Clinical Reasoning in the Health Professions

  • 5th Edition - August 30, 2024
  • Latest edition
  • Editors: Joy Higgs, Gail M. Jensen, Stephen Loftus, Franziska V. Trede, Sandra Grace
  • Language: English

Clinical reasoning is the complex thinking and decision-making used to come to a diagnosis and management plan. It’s a core competency of clinical practice – but because it… Read more

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Description

Clinical reasoning is the complex thinking and decision-making used to come to a diagnosis and management plan. It’s a core competency of clinical practice – but because it involves many elements and unconscious processes, it’s both difficult to learn and teach.

Clinical Reasoning in the Health Professions, Fifth Edition provides the concepts and frameworks healthcare professionals need to be able to reason effectively, make sound and defensible clinical decisions, and learn from experience as they develop from student to practitioner.

Edited by leading experts in the field from Australia and the US, this fifth edition presents the latest understandings and evidence around clinical reasoning in clinical practice, and how can it be taught and assessed. It’s ideal for both undergraduate and post-graduate health students as well as academic and clinical health educators.

Key features

  • Presents a new understanding of clinical reasoning in the circumstances confronting healthcare systems today
  • Covers the future of healthcare and social justice
  • Provides the latest theories on teaching, learning and assessing clinical reasoning - ideal for educators and researchers
  • Easy to read with figures, tables and chapter summaries
  • Case studies integrate theory with practice
  • Examines clinical reasoning as a core competency
  • Includes team-based care/teaming and the role of shared decision making

Table of contents

PART 1 The Future of Healthcare: The Big Picture of Clinical Decision Making

1. The Future of Healthcare

2. Contexts of Clinical Reasoning: Navigating a World of Increasing Complexity

PART 2 Understanding Clinical Reasoning

3. Clinical Reasoning: Challenges of Interpretation and Practice in the Current Era

4. Re-interpreting Clinical Reasoning: a Model of Encultured Decision-making Practice Capabilities

5. Multiple Spaces of Engagement and Influence in Clinical Decision Making

6. A Critical Social Sciences Model for Practice

7. The Development of Clinical Reasoning Expertise

8. The Language of Clinical Reasoning

9. Expertise and Clinical Reasoning

10. Empowerment and Clinical Reasoning

PART 3 The Context of Emerging Clinical Reasoning

11. Changing Demographic and Cultural Dimensions of Populations: Implications for
Healthcare and Decision Making

12. Multiple Contexts of Healthcare

13. Next-generation Clinical Practice Guidelines

14. Evidence-based Practice and Clinical Reasoning: How Are the Two Related?

15. Collaborative Decision Making in Liquid Times

16. A Model for Clinical Ethics Reasoning in Adult and Paediatric Medicine

17. Cultivating Clinical Reasoning: the Need for the Health Humanities

18. Shared Decision Making in Practice

19. Using Telehealth in Clinical Education: Opportunities, Challenges and Considerations

PART 4 Clinical Reasoning and the Professions

20. Methods in the Study of Clinical Reasoning

21. Clinical Reasoning and Biomedical Knowledge Implications for Teaching

22. Clinical Reasoning in Medicine

23. Clinical Reasoning in Nursing

24. Clinical Reasoning in Physiotherapy

25. Clinical Reasoning in Dentistry

26. Clinical Reasoning in Occupational Therapy

27. Clinical Decision Making in Paramedicine

28. Decision Making and Clinical Reasoning in Optometry

29. Clinical Reasoning in Dietetics

30. Clinical Reasoning in Pharmacy

31. Speech Pathology: Facilitating Clinical Reasoning

32. Clinical Decision Making Across Orthodox and Complementary Medicine Fields

PART 5 Pedagogy

33. Towards a Clinical Education Pedagogy for Developing Clinical Reasoning Capability

34. Leading a Faculty in Implementing Clinical Reasoning

35. Developing a Curriculum on Clinical Reasoning

36. Teaching Clinical Reasoning to Preclinical Medical Students

37. Teaching Clinical Reasoning in Nursing Education

38. Interprofessional Programmes to Develop Clinical Reasoning

39. Teaching Clinical Reasoning in Paramedicine

40. Developing Clinical Reasoning Capability

41. Learning to Communicate Clinical Reasoning

42. Learning to Research Clinical Reasoning

43. Clinical Decision Making, Culture and Health

44. Learning About Factors Influencing Clinical Decision Making

45. Peer Learning to Develop Clinical Reasoning Abilities

46. Assessing Clinical Reasoning in Medicine

47. Clinical Reasoning Education: Looking to the Future

Product details

  • Edition: 5
  • Latest edition
  • Published: October 18, 2024
  • Language: English

About the editors

JH

Joy Higgs

Joy has worked for over 35 years as an educator, scholar, researcher and research supervisor at The University of New South Wales, The University of Sydney and Charles Sturt University. She has held appointments as visiting scholar and consultant to a number of Australian and international tertiary institutions. In 2004, Joy received a Member of the Order of Australia award for service to health science education through course development, academic and administrative contributions and research into teaching methods. She was awarded an Australian Teaching and Learning Council Fellowship in 2010. Joy is a member of the Australian Learning and Teaching Fellows Network. In 2015, Joy was appointed a Principal Fellow of the Higher Education Academy, UK. Professor Joy Higgs' key roles at CSU are promoting the advancement of professional practice and education through collaborations in research, scholarship, student supervision, education, organisational change and networking. Joy's research interests are linked to professional practice (the nature of practice across professions, practice wisdom, professionalism, the changing shape of professions in work and society), higher education (quality and innovations), professional education (pedagogies, socialisation, expectations of graduates), practice-based education (pedagogy, curriculum frameworks) and qualitative research strategies.
Affiliations and expertise
Emeritus Professor in Higher Education Charles Sturt University Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

GJ

Gail M. Jensen

Dr. Jensen is Vice Provost for Learning and Assessment, Dean Emerita, and Professor of Physical Therapy at Creighton University. She is known nationally and internationally for scholarly contributions in expert practice, clinical reasoning, professional ethics, and interprofessional education. Dr. Jensen is author or coauthor of more than 90 publications in peer-reviewed journals and has coauthored 13 books, including the fourth edition of Clinical Reasoning in the Health Professions (Higgs, Jensen, Loftus, Christensen), Educating Physical Therapists, and in 2020, Clinical Reasoning and Decision Making in Physical Therapy. She led the research team that completed a National Study of Excellence and Innovation in Physical Therapist Education funded by the American Physical Therapy Association and several APTA components. She serves on a number of editorial boards and most recently became an associate editor for The Clinical Teacher. Dr. Jensen received her PhD in educational evaluation with a minor in sociology from Stanford University. She holds a master’s degree in physical therapy from Stanford University and a bachelor’s degree in education from the University of Minnesota.
Affiliations and expertise
Professor, Dept of Physical Therapy and Dept of Medical Humanities; Vice Provost for Learning and Assessment, Dean Emerita School of Pharmacy and Health Professions Creighton University Omaha, Nebraska, USA

SL

Stephen Loftus

Dr. Loftus joined Oakland University William Beaumont School of Medicine in November 2013 as associate professor of Medical Education. He is responsible for faculty development in medical education. He is also involved in a number of courses such as Medical Humanities and Embark research projects. A dental professional with more than 20 years in medical education, Dr. Loftus developed an internationally recognized inter-professional online graduate course in pain management at Sydney University. His research on clinical reasoning has appeared in several journals and books, such as the well-received book, “Clinical Reasoning in the Health Professions” (3rd ed). He has also supervised doctoral research students at Charles Sturt University in Australia, in topics such as clinical reasoning, higher education and clinician/patient relationships. Dr. Loftus works to ensure that students and faculty maximize the benefit of the educational experiences provided in the medical school through coming to a deeper understanding of what is involved in medical education and practice.
Affiliations and expertise
Adjunct Associate Professor of Medical Education William Beaumont School of Medicine Oakland University Rochester, Michigan, United States

FT

Franziska V. Trede

Franziska Trede is Associate Professor in Higher Education at Charles Sturt University where she leads research, scholarship and practice in professional education and workplace learning. She is a national board member of the Australian Collaborative Education Network. She teaches an open online subject to academics and practitioners on the theory and practice of workplace learning. Her research focuses on professional practice, learner agency and resilience, pedagogy of deliberateness, professional identity development and professionalism. She has developed innovative online capacity building teaching tools using arts-based approaches. Franziska published 7 books and over 80 peer-reviewed papers and has presented her work in Canada, Europe and New Zealand. Her latest book under contract with Springer is titled Education for practice in hybrid spaces: Enhancing professional learning with mobile technology.
Affiliations and expertise
Professor in Higher Education and Professional Practice Education Portfolio University of Technology Sydney Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

SG

Sandra Grace

Dr Sandra Grace is a health services researcher with extensive research experience, including primary health care, practice-based education, models of care and interprofessional education and practice. She has extensive experience as a practitioner, teacher, designer of health training courses and project manager, including grant writing, managing staff and budgets, meeting key performance indicators and preparing project reports.
Affiliations and expertise
Professor of Integrative Medicine Faculty of Health Southern Cross University Lismore, New South Wales, Australia