
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Internal medicine physicians like to pride ourselves on our clinical reasoning – the ability to talk to any patient, pluck out seemingly random bits of information, and make a mystery diagnosis. But how does this actually work? In this episode, called The History, I'll be joined by Gurpreet Dhaliwal as we explore the beginnings of our understanding on how clinical reasoning works – starting in the middle of the 19th century with polar tensions between two ways of approaching our patients that are still felt today. Along the way, we'll talk about the American Civil War, Car Talk, Sherlock Holmes, and whether the practice of medicine can ever be considered a science.
Sign up for Digital Education 2022 here: https://cmecatalog.hms.harvard.edu/digital-education
Sources:
By Adam Rodman, MD, MPH, FACP4.8
414414 ratings
Internal medicine physicians like to pride ourselves on our clinical reasoning – the ability to talk to any patient, pluck out seemingly random bits of information, and make a mystery diagnosis. But how does this actually work? In this episode, called The History, I'll be joined by Gurpreet Dhaliwal as we explore the beginnings of our understanding on how clinical reasoning works – starting in the middle of the 19th century with polar tensions between two ways of approaching our patients that are still felt today. Along the way, we'll talk about the American Civil War, Car Talk, Sherlock Holmes, and whether the practice of medicine can ever be considered a science.
Sign up for Digital Education 2022 here: https://cmecatalog.hms.harvard.edu/digital-education
Sources:

1,872 Listeners

320 Listeners

549 Listeners

500 Listeners

3,376 Listeners

278 Listeners

1,150 Listeners

597 Listeners

196 Listeners

699 Listeners

515 Listeners

369 Listeners

254 Listeners

431 Listeners

372 Listeners