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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 2/2011

Open Access 01-02-2011 | Reviews

Gut Feelings as a Third Track in General Practitioners’ Diagnostic Reasoning

Authors: Erik Stolper, GP, PhD, Margje Van de Wiel, PhD, Paul Van Royen, GP, PhD, Marloes Van Bokhoven, GP, PhD, Trudy Van der Weijden, PhD, Geert Jan Dinant, GP, PhD

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 2/2011

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Abstract

Background

General practitioners (GPs) are often faced with complicated, vague problems in situations of uncertainty that they have to solve at short notice. In such situations, gut feelings seem to play a substantial role in their diagnostic process. Qualitative research distinguished a sense of alarm and a sense of reassurance. However, not every GP trusted their gut feelings, since a scientific explanation is lacking.

Objective

This paper explains how gut feelings arise and function in GPs’ diagnostic reasoning.

Approach

The paper reviews literature from medical, psychological and neuroscientific perspectives.

Conclusions

Gut feelings in general practice are based on the interaction between patient information and a GP’s knowledge and experience. This is visualized in a knowledge-based model of GPs’ diagnostic reasoning emphasizing that this complex task combines analytical and non-analytical cognitive processes. The model integrates the two well-known diagnostic reasoning tracks of medical decision-making and medical problem-solving, and adds gut feelings as a third track. Analytical and non-analytical diagnostic reasoning interacts continuously, and GPs use elements of all three tracks, depending on the task and the situation. In this dual process theory, gut feelings emerge as a consequence of non-analytical processing of the available information and knowledge, either reassuring GPs or alerting them that something is wrong and action is required. The role of affect as a heuristic within the physician’s knowledge network explains how gut feelings may help GPs to navigate in a mostly efficient way in the often complex and uncertain diagnostic situations of general practice. Emotion research and neuroscientific data support the unmistakable role of affect in the process of making decisions and explain the bodily sensation of gut feelings.The implications for health care practice and medical education are discussed.
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Metadata
Title
Gut Feelings as a Third Track in General Practitioners’ Diagnostic Reasoning
Authors
Erik Stolper, GP, PhD
Margje Van de Wiel, PhD
Paul Van Royen, GP, PhD
Marloes Van Bokhoven, GP, PhD
Trudy Van der Weijden, PhD
Geert Jan Dinant, GP, PhD
Publication date
01-02-2011
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 2/2011
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-010-1524-5

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