Medical Decision-Making
Abstract
Clinical judgment, also called clinical reasoning, clinical decision-making, and diagnostic-therapeutic decision-making, lies at the heart of clinical practice and thus medicine. In thepast, clinical judgment was considered the expert task of the physician. But the advent of computers in the 1940s and their use in medicine as of the late 1950s gradually changed this situation. In the 1960s, a new discipline emerged that has come to be termed medical computer science or medical informatics, including clinical informatics. Clinical informatics is concerned with all aspects of the application of computing machinery in clinical research and practice. As one of its accomplishments in clinical practice, the physician’s capacity
for clinical judgment is in the process of being turned over to computers.
We are told that computers will be responsible for making diagnoses and
treatment decisions in a not-too-distant future. This prospect, its historical,
methodological and philosophical background, and its impact on health care
will be discussed in the present Part VI which divides into these three chapters:
19 Medical Decision-Making
20 Clinical Decision Support Systems
21 Artificial Intelligence in Medicine?