There is a lot of talk about team-based care nowadays, and I had seen some shining examples of that, most recently when a patient at my clinic had a suicide in the family.
But at the same time, there are so many decisions – judgment calls, really – that we make every single day where there isn’t anywhere near enough time to involve team members.
I talk to patients all the time who ruminate, often at night, about the choices they made every day, and replay their conversations, reasoning, and actions to the point of losing sleep and experiencing distress.
I also know of a few clinicians who do the same thing.
I think there are a few fundamental tolerances clinicians must have:
One is tolerance of uncertainty. The other is a tolerance of being where the buck stops.
“Medicine is a science of uncertainty and an art of probability” is a famous quote by my hero, Sir William Osler.
This is a dichotomy: On one hand, the diagnostic possibilities in most cases are nearly endless, thus uncertainty, but at the same time, the major probabilities are usually pretty clear cut.
Our mission, should we chose to accept it (Mission: Impossible – in my case, the original series; I assume that quote is still relevant) is to embrace both the uncertainty and the need not accept indecision.
At that moment, we are often alone.
The only way to balance these seemingly opposite notions is to acknowledge that no one can know for sure, but the probability is … that is, being human and being fallible, but also possessing a certain amount of knowledge based confidence.
In my Swedish training, it was considered appropriate to consider and make a clinical decision based on “the odds.” In America, that isn’t always recognized. I agree you cannot completely skip over considering the probability of the esoteric, but how much weight do you give it?. If we don’t reign in the temptation to overestimate the odds of the esoteric, our health care will bankrupt us even faster than I imagined.
The kinds of decisions we usually need to make on our own are ones we have to live with and ones we cannot let ruin our sleep or our sanity.
Antibiotics or not? Hospital admission or not? Imaging or clinical diagnosis?
You do your best. It is all you can do. Without obsessing. Osler called that equanimity.
Hans Duvefelt, also known as “A Country Doctor,” is a family physician who blogs at A Country Doctor Writes:.
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