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  • Ninety-Nine Lessons in Critical Thinking

    Ninety-Nine Lessons in Critical Thinking by Friedland, Robert P.;

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    Beszerezhetőség

    Becsült beszerzési idő: Várható beérkezés: 2026. január vége.
    A Prosperónál jelenleg nincsen raktáron.

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    A termék adatai:

    • Kiadó OUP USA
    • Megjelenés dátuma 2025. április 23.

    • ISBN 9780197756218
    • Kötéstípus Puhakötés
    • Terjedelem304 oldal
    • Méret 235x157x17 mm
    • Súly 390 g
    • Nyelv angol
    • 656

    Kategóriák

    Rövid leírás:

    Ninety-Nine Lessons in Critical Thinking was designed to enhance the reader's awareness of how they think and how decisions involving patients and scientific matters can be influenced by word choice, preconceived ideas, framing, biases, and inattentiveness. Entertaining and informative stories from the author's 45 year clinical and scientific experience and from the history of medicine and science are presented to illustrate ways in which critical thinking skills can be developed. Practical suggestions to improve doctor-patient interactions are included, with an emphasis on approaching care regarding the patient's life context and personhood.

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    Hosszú leírás:

    Ninety-Nine Lessons in Critical Thinking was designed to enhance the reader's awareness of how they think and how decisions involving patients and scientific matters can be influenced by word choice, preconceived ideas, framing, biases, and inattentiveness. Entertaining and informative stories from the author's 45 year clinical and scientific experience and from the history of medicine and science are presented to illustrate ways in which critical thinking skills can be developed and awareness of thought processes enhanced.

    The evolution of human learning and awareness is used to illustrate the fundamental nature of the concepts, and emphasis is placed on ways to enhance awareness of how our attention and words influence thought. Medical professionals (including medical students, residents, postgraduate fellows, graduate students, dentists, and nurse practitioners) are faced with an enormous amount of information coming from scientific literature, computerized patient records and artificial intelligence. Methods for dealing with this avalanche of data and ways to retain focus on key patient and scientific matters are explored, and practical suggestions to improve doctor-patient interactions are included, with a focus on approaching care regarding the patient's life context and personhood.

    The ninety-nine lessons demonstrate how to enhance understanding of the humanity of both the patient and the doctor and how awareness of thought is essential for innovative and compassionate care and research.

    If I could send a time capsule to my younger self containing but one item, it would surely be Ninety-Nine Lessons. In the form of ninety-nine lessons, highly entertaining stories, Friedland intertwines the wisdom of sages with life experiences to give needed advice to the young scientist or physician. In a world full of facts, this primer clarifies the limits of knowledge and those seeking to extend the frontiers. The greatest contribution of this book is perspective and encouragement in the face of the fact heavy curriculum of graduate and medical school.

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    Tartalomjegyzék:

    SECTION I DOCTOR- PATIENT INTERACTIONS
    1. The World Is Too Complex To Perceive Directly
    2. The Key Factor Which Determines What We Perceive Is Our Attention and How It Is Focused
    3. Which Is Older, Stories or Books?
    4. Be Fierce, Nurture an Intense and Ferocious Aggressiveness in the Pursuit of Your Learning and the Benefit of Your Patients
    5. "Listen to Your Patient, He Is Telling You the Diagnosis"
    6. Be a Good Observer
    7. Consider the Patient's Experience
    8. Learn from Your Patients
    9. Intellectualization Limits Your Compassion
    10. Key Elements of the Patient Visit: The Interview and Deep Listening
    11. Words Influence Thought
    12. The Physical Exam
    13. Touch Is Important
    14. Be Prepared for the Unexpected
    SECTION II DIAGNOSIS AND EVALUATION
    15. The Fundamental Three- Step Approach to Diagnosis
    16. A Mnemonic for Etiologies, VITAMINS ABCD
    17. Investigations
    18. Don't Be Afraid To Say You Don't Know
    19. Information Toxicity
    20. Treat the Patient, Not the Test
    21. It's Good To Be Knowledgeable, but It Is Necessary to Also Be Attentive to the Patient
    22. Consider Toxic Exposures
    23. Family History Is an Important Part of the Interview
    24. Rare Presentations of Common Events Are More Common Than Common Presentations of Rare Events
    25. Symptoms and Signs Have Important Significance: The Absence of Symptoms and Signs Is Not Always as Important as Their Presence
    26. Salutogenesis: The Production and Maintenance of Health
    SECTION III MANAGEMENT
    27. Get to Know the Patient and Show Interest (the Patient Is a Person)
    28. Learn from Clinical Experience (but Not Too Much)
    29. Use the Placebo Response to Your Patient's Benefit
    30. Tell the Truth Whenever Possible
    31. Cognitive Function Is Relevant for All Areas of Medicine
    32. You Are Primarily Responsible for Caring for the Patient, Not the Family
    33. Denial of Illness and Disability Can Be Shared by the Patient, the Family, and the Doctor
    34. Consider the Context of Care
    35. Challenges to the Ability to Provide Humane Healthcare
    36. Do Not Confuse Etiology with Pathophysiology
    37. Communicate with the Patient
    38. Be Attentive to Medications and Medication Errors
    SECTION IV CRITICAL THINKING
    39. Think Deeply (Think Beyond the Obvious)
    40. How Often Do Rare Events Occur?
    41. Do Not Depend on Logic Alone
    42. Although Intuition Cannot Replace Evidence, It Can Be Valuable
    43. Should You Think Out of the Box?
    44. All Models Are Wrong
    45. Biomarkers Are Not the Disease Itself
    46. Absence of Evidence Is Not Evidence of Absence
    47. Being Wrong (at Times) Is OK
    48. Much of What We Know Is Wrong (So Don't Believe Everything You Read)
    49. Smart People Make Mistakes
    50. Fishing Expeditions May Be Productive
    51. Manifestations of Bias
    52. Experimenter Bias
    53. Bias of the Lost Actors
    54. Being Smart Is Not Enough
    55. Don't Be Afraid of Your Imagination
    56. Do Not Assume That Your Ideas Are Not Novel and Important Just Because They Appear To Be Obvious
    57. Consider the Evolutionary Aspects of Disease
    SECTION V PERSONAL AND CAREER DEVELOPMENT
    58. Live in "Day-Tight Compartments"
    59. Learn How To Learn and Enhance Your Learning Capacity
    60. Find Out Where You Find Meaning
    61. Search for Your Passion and Follow It (Gnaw Your Own Bone)
    62. Learn to Critically Read the Literature
    63. We Are All Neurologists
    64. Neurology and Cardiology (Etc.) Don't Exist
    65. Do Not Respect Boundaries, Be a Trespasser
    66. Be Grateful
    67. Look Beyond the Easiest Options and Pursue the Best Resources Possible
    68. Focus, but Not Too Much
    69. Be Persistent and Tenacious
    70. Do Not Be Intimidated by Accomplished Persons in Medicine and Science
    71. Accept the Help of Others
    72. Pay Attention to Your Own Health and Learn How To Deal with Stress
    73. Learn from the History of Medicine and Science
    74. Recognize Your Intellectual Ancestors
    75. You Are an Educator- That's One of Your Most Important Responsibilities
    76. Learn To Be a Salesperson
    77. Learn How To Learn from Bad Example
    78. Remember Pierre Curie, Carl Wernicke, and Others
    SECTION VI DISCOVERY
    79. What Is Science?
    80. No Single Theory Ever Agrees with All the Facts
    81. There Is Only One Kind of Science, and That Is the Study of Everything with All Possible Methods
    82. It's Good To Be First, but It Is Not Necessary
    83. You Don't Need To Be Brilliant To Be a Researcher
    84. Appreciate a Diversity of Approaches
    85. Why Think When You Can Experiment?
    86. Judge Every Project by Asking "What Difference Will It Make To Know the Answer?"
    87. What Is Important in Research
    88. Do Not Be Obsessed with Technology and Methods
    89. Pay Attention to Study Design, Data Analysis, and Statistics
    90. Be Aware of (Beware of ) Statistics and Data Torturing
    91. Pay Attention to the Assumptions of Diagnostic Testing and Research Evaluations
    92. It Is Possible To Be Productive from a Distance
    93. You Can Make Contributions as a Clinician Without a Laboratory
    SECTION VII ETHICS
    94. Never Whisper in the Presence of Wrong
    95. You Are Responsible for Your Actions; You Cannot Let Others Take Responsibility for You
    96. The Need To Believe in the Guilty Victim
    97. Compassion Is Part of Our Fundamental Nature
    98. The Myth of Progress
    99. Don't Be Ageist

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