Clinical Practice
Abstract
Clinical practice is where the clinical encounter and decision-making occur.
Thus, it constitutes the focus of medicine. Since the time of Hippocrates, it
has been composed of five activities that have come to be known as anamnesis,
i.e., history taking or clinical interview, diagnosis, prognosis, therapy,
and prevention. These five activities are fundamental features of the healing
relationship. The present chapter is devoted to the analysis and discussion of
their logical, methodological, and philosophical problems.
Usually, the patient expects the physician
to be an expert of her specialty devoid of a bad reputation. This constitutes
what may be called a good doctor, i.e., one whose clinical decisions are
right and good in most cases, at least in as many cases as another expert in
the same area also achieves. In what follows, we shall analyze the characteristics
and presuppositions of such right and good clinical decisions. To this
end, we shall undertake a conceptual analysis of the clinical encounter and
its outcomes, in order to develop a theory of clinical practice. Our analysis
consists of the following five parts: 9.1 The Clinical Encounter; 9.2 Anamnesis and Diagnosis; 9.3 Prognosis; 9.4 Therapy; 9.5 Prevention.