Teaching Medical Students How To Think: Narrative, Mechanistic and Mathematical Thinking

被引:0
作者
de Leon, Jose [1 ,2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Eastern State Hosp, Mental Hlth Res Ctr, 1350 Bull Lea Rd, Lexington, KY 40511 USA
[2] Univ Granada, Inst Neurosci, Psychiat & Neurosci Res Grp CTS 549, Granada, Spain
[3] Univ Basque Country, Santiago Apostol Hosp, Biomed Res Ctr Mental Hlth Net CIBERSAM, Vitoria, Spain
来源
ACTAS ESPANOLAS DE PSIQUIATRIA | 2018年 / 46卷 / 04期
关键词
Data mining; Education; Education/medical; History; 19th century; 20th century; History of medicine; Machine learning; Mathematics; Psychiatry/history; Thinking; Science; Statistics as topic; Systems theory; ADDITIONAL BASIC SCIENCE; CLINICAL MEDICINE; PERSONALIZED MEDICINE; PSYCHIATRY; CRISIS; MODEL;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Computers are becoming better than physicians in some activities. To survive, 21st century physicians need to become better thinkers. The most unique human cognitive skill is the ability to understand other human minds by creating stories about oneself and others (narrative thinking). Narrative thinking is at the core of the art of medicine, and dominated medicine until the 19th century when two types of scientific thinking (mechanistic and mathematical thinking) started to become influential. Mechanistic thinking uses mechanisms (abstract concepts which cannot be demonstrated in experiments but are needed for making hypotheses and interpreting observations from the experiments). In the 19th and 20th centuries, physicians grouped symptoms and signs into syndromes with the hope of separating each syndrome into various diseases based on etiopathological and/or physiopathological mechanisms. The 21st century brought mechanisms based on molecular genetics. Mathematical medical thinking expanded in the 20th century with the tools developed by statisticians. Now data mining and/or machine learning is threatening statisticians. The traditional teaching of medical students based on the example of a clinician mentor who does not engage in reflective thought may no longer be enough. The three types of medical thinking, narrative, mechanistic and mathematical, need to be incorporated by the 21st century physician, whose thought process should also consider the biopsycho-social model of disease and its center, which is the patient. Computers will never substitute for a self-reflective medical expert who is aware of the strengths and limitations of human beings and of an environment characterized by information overload.
引用
收藏
页码:133 / 145
页数:13
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