scholarly journals Corrigendum to “Clinical reasoning in traditional medicine exemplified by the clinical encounter of Korean medicine” [Integr Med Res 2021: 10; 100641]

2021 ◽  
pp. 100817
Author(s):  
Tae-Hun Kim ◽  
Terje Alraek ◽  
Zhao-Xiang Bian ◽  
Stephen Birch ◽  
Mark Bovey ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 100641
Author(s):  
Tae-hun Kim ◽  
Terje Alraek ◽  
Zhao-Xiang Bian ◽  
Stephen Birch ◽  
Mark Bovey ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 36-57
Author(s):  
James Flowers

Abstract This article reveals an important, yet hidden, Korean response to the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 that goes beyond the actions of the state. It focuses on the Korean medicine doctors who were excluded from any government-led public health or treatment plans for COVID-19. Bypassing the state, they used telehealth to provide herbal medicines to 20 percent of COVID-19 patients in South Korea. Traditional medicine doctors volunteered their services and financial resources to fill a gap in COVID-19 care. Most observers attribute Korean success in controlling COVID-19 to the leadership of the technocratic state with buy-in from the population. However, the case of Korea offers an example of bottom-up healthcare in a community where people chose their own native cultural resources and helps to explain how doctors were able to take the initiative to autonomously work with people in the community to help to stop the otherwise rapid transmission of the virus.


2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 133-159 ◽  
Author(s):  
Taewoo Kim

Studies of East Asian medicine have demonstrated that contemporary traditional medicine is by no means static but continuously changing, and current work often emphasises the impact of external forces on this transformation such as the modern state, globalisation, and biomedicine. This paper emphasises another significant—but under-examined—impetus for change: East Asian medical epistemology and its theoretical and clinical elaborations. Drawing on an ethnographic investigation of Korean medicine and focusing on ‘practice’ as a theoretical and methodological vehicle, this study illustrates that traditional medicine retains within great potential to transform itself. Three contemporary acupuncture methods—Sa-am, Eight-Constitution, and Hundred-Degree and their own ways of cultivating tradition (validation of pre-modern methods, combination of existing theories, and reinterpretation of classical texts)—show that East Asian medical theories and epistemology continuously serve as dynamic forces for tradition on the move. By analysing the emergence of new forms of traditional practices in Korean medicine, this study attempts to contribute to the discussion of how tradition exists in modernity.


2020 ◽  
Vol 37 (12) ◽  
pp. 839.2-840
Author(s):  
Susie Roy ◽  
Janet Skinner ◽  
Alan Jaap

Aims/Objectives/BackgroundFew empirical studies explore the contribution of non-clinical factors to perceptions of patient difficulty in EM. Fewer have investigated what students placed in EDs learn about ‘difficult’ patients or what, if anything, clinicians teach about the topic. We looked to address this. Considering these questions is imperative: patients perceived as frustrating report lower satisfaction with their clinical encounter, experience worse health outcomes and seem to be at risk of medical error secondary to faulty clinical reasoning.Methods/DesignWith ethical approval, we undertook three interrelated, qualitative studies to conduct a case study of the undergraduate EM module delivered at Edinburgh University. In the first two, focus groups were used as the method of data collection; five clinician (n=25) and four medical student (n=21) groups were facilitated. In the third, semi-structured interviews with clinicians (n=12) were conducted. All groups/interviews were audio-recorded and transcribed. The data were analysed inductively using reflexive thematic analysis.Results/ConclusionsFrequent attendance, demands, pre-existing relationships and unrealistic expectations contributed to perceived patient difficulty. These were modified by personal and circumstantial factors. Although rarely told, students were aware who these ‘difficult’ patients were through observing behaviours. Critically, clinicians and students alike believed frustration adversely impacted aspects of clinical reasoning. Students struggled when witnessing what they considered ‘bad’ behaviour as it contradicted their previously held ideals of how physicians should act.It seems we teach students to try to internalise emotion yet that it is acceptable to let it negatively impact patient care. To combat this, students sought greater emotional transparency from physicians as well as advice on self-management strategies. Clinicians recognised the benefits of being candid but were afraid of being so. Contributing to this is the culture in medicine being one that mistrusts emotion. Further, both groups desired a formal curriculum addressing emotion in clinical reasoning thus suggesting one is needed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 40-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Birgitte Ahlsen ◽  
Anne Marit Mengshoel ◽  
Hilde Bondevik ◽  
Eivind Engebretsen

This article investigates the clinical reasoning process of physiotherapists working with patients with chronic muscle pain. The article demonstrates how physiotherapists work with clues and weigh up different plots as they seek to build consistent stories about their patient’s illness. The material consists of interviews with 10 Norwegian physiotherapists performed after the first clinical encounter with a patient. Using a narrative approach and Lonergan’s theory of interpretation, the study highlights how, like detectives, the therapists work with clues by asking a number of interpretive questions of their data. They interrogate what they have observed and heard during the first session, they also question how the patient’s story was told, including the contextual and relation aspects of clue production, and they ask why the patient’s story was told to them in this particular way at this particular time. The article shows how the therapists configure clues into various plots on the basis of their experience of working with similar cases and how their detective work is pushed forward by uncertainty and persistent questioning of the data.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 89
Author(s):  
Amanda Nichole (Mandi) Carr ◽  
Roy Neville Kirkwood ◽  
Kiro Risto Petrovski

Effective clinical teaching is essential for the development of veterinary learners. Teaching clinical reasoning is a challenge for veterinary instructors as many lack adequate training in clinical teaching. In this paper, we propose the use of the five-microskills (FMS; also known as the one-minute preceptor) model of clinical teaching as a tool that can be used not only in teaching during clinical encounters but also during traditional teaching sessions (e.g., practicals). The FMS model assists the instructor in estimating the level of knowledge and development of the learner and allows for providing feedback. The FMS model is applicable in the busy clinical or teaching schedule of the instructor and requires training only of the instructor, not the learner. We provide two examples of the use of the FMS model, one of a clinical encounter and the other a biochemistry practical. From the examples, readers should be able to extract the basis of the model and start using it in their day-to-day practice. For proper use of the model, 1–4 h of training is usually recommended.


Diagnosis ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 299-305 ◽  
Author(s):  
Divya Ramani ◽  
Michael Soh ◽  
Jerusalem Merkebu ◽  
Steven J. Durning ◽  
Alexis Battista ◽  
...  

AbstractObjectivesUncertainty is common in clinical reasoning given the dynamic processes required to come to a diagnosis. Though some uncertainty is expected during clinical encounters, it can have detrimental effects on clinical reasoning. Likewise, evidence has established the potentially detrimental effects of the presence of distracting contextual factors (i.e., factors other than case content needed to establish a diagnosis) in a clinical encounter on clinical reasoning. The purpose of this study was to examine how linguistic markers of uncertainty overlap with different clinical reasoning tasks and how distracting contextual factors might affect physicians’ clinical reasoning process.MethodsIn this descriptive exploratory study, physicians participated in a live or video recorded simulated clinical encounter depicting a patient with unstable angina with and without contextual factors. Transcribed think-aloud reflections were coded using Goldszmidt’s clinical reasoning task typology (26 tasks encompassing the domains of framing, diagnosis, management, and reflection) and then those coded categories were examined using linguistic markers of uncertainty (e.g., probably, possibly, etc.).ResultsThirty physicians with varying levels of experience participated. Consistent with expectations, descriptive analysis revealed that physicians expressed more uncertainty in cases with distracting contextual factors compared to those without. Across the four domains of reasoning tasks, physicians expressed the most uncertainty in diagnosis and least in reflection.ConclusionsThese results highlight how linguistic markers of uncertainty can shed light on the role contextual factors might play in uncertainty which can lead to error and why it is essential to find ways of managing it.


1981 ◽  
Vol 09 (02) ◽  
pp. 134-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. I. Brekhman ◽  
M. A. Grinevitch ◽  
Kim Ben Kyu

The investigated plants were processed in a computer to calculate their respective frequency of utilization in the traditional medicine of Japan and Korea. Each plant was characterized by means of certain quantitative indices (frequency-, pharmacological-, therapeutic- and cumulative indices). Out of 663 species included in 558 prescriptions, a few "elite" groups were selected which constitute a total of 92 herbs.


2016 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 97-111
Author(s):  
Juyeon Lee ◽  
Minho Lee ◽  
Sun-mi Choi ◽  
Yong-suk Kim ◽  
Byunghee Koh ◽  
...  

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