Book contents
- Clinical Reasoning and Decision-Making in Psychiatry
- Reviews
- Clinical Reasoning and Decision-Making in Psychiatry
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- 1 Making Sense of the Senseless: How to Gather and Organize Pertinent Information
- 2 The Approach to Diagnostic Ambiguity
- 3 What the Patient Isn’t Telling You: When Seeing Is Not Believing
- 4 Shared Decision-Making
- 5 Deciding on Appropriate Treatment Modalities: Medication, Psychotherapy, Hospitalization, and Other Levels of Care
- 6 Measurement-Based Care and Applying Statistical Concepts to the Individual Patient
- 7 Hypothesis-Testing and Crafting Patient-Specific Decision Trees
- 8 Decision Points in Iterative Pharmacotherapy
- 9 Hierarchical and Complex Pharmacotherapy Decision-Making
- 10 Prioritizing the Components of Any Decision-Making Model
- Index
- References
7 - Hypothesis-Testing and Crafting Patient-Specific Decision Trees
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 March 2024
- Clinical Reasoning and Decision-Making in Psychiatry
- Reviews
- Clinical Reasoning and Decision-Making in Psychiatry
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- 1 Making Sense of the Senseless: How to Gather and Organize Pertinent Information
- 2 The Approach to Diagnostic Ambiguity
- 3 What the Patient Isn’t Telling You: When Seeing Is Not Believing
- 4 Shared Decision-Making
- 5 Deciding on Appropriate Treatment Modalities: Medication, Psychotherapy, Hospitalization, and Other Levels of Care
- 6 Measurement-Based Care and Applying Statistical Concepts to the Individual Patient
- 7 Hypothesis-Testing and Crafting Patient-Specific Decision Trees
- 8 Decision Points in Iterative Pharmacotherapy
- 9 Hierarchical and Complex Pharmacotherapy Decision-Making
- 10 Prioritizing the Components of Any Decision-Making Model
- Index
- References
Summary
Formulating and empirically testing hypotheses lies at the core of the scientific method, and is a cornerstone for practicing evidence-based medicine – especially if and when the evidence base for a given problem may not yet be so well developed in the literature. Whether we realize it or not, every clinical encounter is essentially the buildup to generating a hypothesis – a framework for explaining how and why a set of problems arose, and then figuring out whether the available information supports or refutes the proposed explanation. A hypothesis is a testable, falsifiable question posed about the association between two variables.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Clinical Reasoning and Decision-Making in Psychiatry , pp. 177 - 208Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024