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Journal article

Critical thinking in healthcare and education.

Abstract:

Imagine you are a primary care doctor. A patient comes into your office with acute, atypical chest pain. Immediately you consider the patient’s sex and age, and you begin to think about what questions to ask and what diagnoses and diagnostic tests to consider. You will also need to think about what treatments to consider and how to communicate with the patient and potentially with the patient’s family and other healthcare providers. Some of what you do will be done reflexively, with little explicit thought, but caring for most patients also requires you to think critically about what you are going to do.


Critical thinking, the ability to think clearly and rationally about what to do or what to believe, is essential for the practice of medicine. Few doctors are likely to argue with this. Yet, until recently, the UK regulator the General Medical Council and similar bodies in North America did not mention “critical thinking” anywhere in their standards for licensing and accreditation,1 and critical thinking is not explicitly taught or assessed in most education programmes for health professionals.


Moreover, although more than 2800 articles indexed by PubMed have “critical thinking” in the title or abstract, most are about nursing. We argue that it is important for clinicians and patients to learn to think critically and that the teaching and learning of these skills should be considered explicitly. Given the shared interest in critical thinking with broader education, we also highlight why healthcare and education professionals and researchers need to work together to enable people to think critically about the health choices they make throughout life.

Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.1136/bmj.j2234

Authors

More by this author
Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MSD
Department:
Primary Care Health Sciences
Role:
Author


Publisher:
BMJ Publishing Group
Journal:
BMJ More from this journal
Volume:
357
Pages:
j2234
Publication date:
2017-05-01
Acceptance date:
2017-03-06
DOI:
EISSN:
1756-1833
ISSN:
0959-8138
Pmid:
28512135


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:698852
UUID:
uuid:57fc003d-364a-46ab-97ca-9c3c54cb6acf
Local pid:
pubs:698852
Source identifiers:
698852
Deposit date:
2018-02-25
ARK identifier:

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