Publication | Closed Access
Clinical reasoning and population health: Decision making for an emerging paradigm of health care
62
Citations
28
References
2008
Year
Family MedicineClinical Decision-makingPatient SelectionClinical ReasoningMedical Decision MakingPrimary CareChronic Disease ManagementChronic Musculoskeletal ConditionPain ManagementDecision MakingHealth Services ResearchPhysical MedicineHealth SciencesHealth PolicyDecision AidClinical Decision SupportRehabilitationPhysical TreatmentPhysical TherapyPain TreatmentNursingPatient EducationClinical PracticeChronic ConditionsMedicineClinical Decision Support SystemHealth Informatics
Chronic conditions now provide the major disease and disability burden facing humanity. This development has necessitated a reorientation in the practice skills of health care professions away from hospital-based inpatient and outpatient care toward community-based management of patients with chronic conditions. Part of this reorientation toward community-based management of chronic conditions involves practitioners' understanding and adoption of a concept of population health management based on appropriate theoretical models of health care. Drawing on recent studies of expertise in physiotherapy, this article proposes a clinical reasoning and decision-making framework to meet these challenges. The challenge of population and community-based management of chronic conditions also provides an opportunity for physiotherapists to further clarify a professional epistemology of practice that embraces the kinds of knowledge and clinical reasoning processes used in physiotherapy practice. Three case studies related to the management of chronic musculoskeletal pain in different populations are used to exemplify the range of epistemological perspectives that underpin community-based practice. They illustrate the link between conceptualizations of practice problems and knowledge sources that are used as a basis for clinical reasoning and decision making as practitioners are increasingly required to move between the clinic and the community.
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