How many physicians do you know who would agree with that sentiment?
Simpkin and Schwartzstein go on to make a noble and necessary argument for the place of uncertainty in modern medical practice. While the proposal is made for the entirety of the profession and the full span of specialties, I was struck by the applicability of the argument to chronic pain management, specifically.
Too often, we focus on transforming a patient’s gray-scale narrative into a black-and-white diagnosis that can be neatly categorized and labeled. The unintended consequence — an obsession with finding the right answer, at the risk of oversimplifying the richly iterative and evolutionary nature of clinical reasoning — is the very antithesis of humanistic, individualized patient-centered care.This is how non-specific low back pain turns into a 15 year old work comp claim.
The authors make several recommendations, each of which targets the very heart of medical education and clinical practice culture. We need to cease viewing uncertainty as a threat, but rather embrace it as part of the iterative nature of care. We need to move away from multiple choice tests in medical education that require definitive answers and instead focus on evaluating medical students' tolerance for uncertainty and ability to posit based on incomplete information.
Perhaps the most daunting recommendation they make, though, is the idea of moving away from concept of diagnosis and instead focusing doctor-patient conversations on the concept of hypothesis.
We can speak about “hypotheses” rather than “diagnoses,” thereby changing the expectations of both patients and physicians and facilitating a shift in culture. This shift may entail discussing uncertainty directly with patients, intentionally reflecting on its origins — subjectivity in the illness narrative, diagnostic sensitivity and specificity, unpredictability of treatment outcomes, and our own hidden assumptions and unconscious biases, to name a few. We can then teach physicians specifically how to communicate scientific uncertainty, which is essential if patients are to truly share in decision making, and we can reduce everyone’s discomfort by reframing uncertainty as a surmountable challenge rather than as a threat.This requires treating the whole patient. This requires recognizing the psychological and social contributors to pain perception and tolerance. This requires seeing through the psychotropic effects of opioids and other addictive medications to get to the root cause issues of chronic pain. This requires not just patient advocacy, but truly shared decision making.
Of course, this would also require us to move away from the dilapidated and counter-productive world of fee-for-service billing. This would also require payers and employers to pay for quality, a genuine willingness to pay more dollars for less care (in the traditional sense) and more shared decision making (which will inevitably lead to better outcomes).
So there's a little slice of utopia for you, this Monday morning... with a heaping side helping of reality.
Michael
On Twitter @PRIUM1
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