Introduction to Clinical Reasoning

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Introduction[edit | edit source]

Definitions of Clinical Reasoning

There are multiple different definition of clinical reasoning. Some of these definitions are listed here.

"Clinical reasoning (or practice decision making) is a context-dependent way of thinking and decision making in professional practice to guide practice actions."Chapter 1 Higgs and Jensen in Higgs Clinical Reasoning in Health Professionals

"Clinical reasoning refers to the thinking and decision-making processes that are used in clinical practice." Edwards I, Jones M, Carr J, Braunack-Mayer A, Jensen GM. Clinical reasoning strategies in physical therapy. Physical therapy. 2004 Apr 1;84(4):312-30.

Clinical reasoning in physical therapy could be conceptualised as "integrating cognitive, psychomotor, and affective skills. It is contextual in nature and involves both therapist and client perspectives. It is adaptive, iterative, and collaborative with the intended outcome being a biopsychosocial approach to patient/client management." Huhn K, Gilliland SJ, Black LL, Wainwright SF, Christensen N. Clinical reasoning in physical therapy: a concept analysis. Physical therapy. 2019 Apr;99(4):440-56.

In occupational therapy clinically reasoning is defined asda Silva Araujo A, Anne Kinsella E, Thomas A, Demonari Gomes L, Quevedo Marcolino T. Clinical Reasoning in Occupational Therapy Practice: A Scoping Review of Qualitative and Conceptual Peer-Reviewed Literature. The American Journal of Occupational Therapy. 2022 May 1;76(3):7603205070.: (also refer to references within this reference)

"a largely tacit, highly imagistic and deeply phenomenological mode of thinking"

" the process used by practitioners to plan, direct, perform and reflect on client care

"as a mode of thought that involves all the thinking processes of the clinician as s/he moves into, through and out of the therapeutic relationship and therapy process with a client"

Clinical reasoning is "a process in which the therapist, interacting with the patient and others (s8such as family members or others providing care), helps patients structure meaning, goals, and health management strategies based on clinical data, patient choices, and professional judgement and knowledge."Higgs and Jones in Edwards

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