Expert decision-making in clinicians: An auto-analytic ethnographic study of operational decision-making in urgent care.

<h4>Objective</h4>To conceptualise the cognitive processes of early expert decision-making in urgent care.<h4>Background</h4>Expert clinicians in the UK frequently determine suitable urgent care patient pathways via telephone triage. This strategy is promoted by policymakers...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nicola Irvine, Robert Van Der Meer, Itamar Megiddo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0311748
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1832540361060253696
author Nicola Irvine
Robert Van Der Meer
Itamar Megiddo
author_facet Nicola Irvine
Robert Van Der Meer
Itamar Megiddo
author_sort Nicola Irvine
collection DOAJ
description <h4>Objective</h4>To conceptualise the cognitive processes of early expert decision-making in urgent care.<h4>Background</h4>Expert clinicians in the UK frequently determine suitable urgent care patient pathways via telephone triage. This strategy is promoted by policymakers but how it is performed, and its effectiveness has not been evaluated. Evaluation of early senior decision-making requires knowledge of decision-processes, influences, and goals. Previous research has focused on diagnostic decision-making and rarely studied clinicians in the field.<h4>Method</h4>We triangulated analytic autoethnography of early expert decision-making with focused ethnography of experts and trainee doctors performing the task. The study took place in a medium-sized Acute Medical Unit which provided internal medical emergency care for a mixed urban and rural population in the UK. A grounded theoretical model of expert decision-making was created via Gioia Methodology. Decision types were categorised to identify differences in solutions as well as decision processes.<h4>Results</h4>The hallmarks of intuitive decision-making were found in most expert decisions. Experts made intuitive use of pattern-matching to extract key data from large volumes of information which triggered the spontaneous manifestation of solutions. Solutions were holistic and usually solitary. Upon manifestation solutions were consciously tested for viability with emotional affect playing a key role. Expert solutions were previously applied ones but were frequently entirely novel. Novel solution generation was not a feature of trainee decisions but moments of intuition were. Expert goals varied between optimal care for individual patients, system-wide efficiency, and equity of care. The decision environment had a large influence upon experts.<h4>Conclusion</h4>Expert clinicians employ intuitive decision-making supported by rational analysis in early urgent care decision-making. Expert solutions generated in this manner are pragmatic rather than optimal, context dependent, and seek to achieve goals which vary from moment-moment. Findings are crucial to inform research evaluating the effectiveness of early expert decision-making in urgent care as it is a high cost strategy. They also have implications for methodological approaches in future studies of expert clinical decision-making, developing artificial expert systems, and clinician training.
format Article
id doaj-art-f28c5ca4fe094ba2a1f94752a76fede5
institution Kabale University
issn 1932-6203
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
record_format Article
series PLoS ONE
spelling doaj-art-f28c5ca4fe094ba2a1f94752a76fede52025-02-05T05:31:08ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01201e031174810.1371/journal.pone.0311748Expert decision-making in clinicians: An auto-analytic ethnographic study of operational decision-making in urgent care.Nicola IrvineRobert Van Der MeerItamar Megiddo<h4>Objective</h4>To conceptualise the cognitive processes of early expert decision-making in urgent care.<h4>Background</h4>Expert clinicians in the UK frequently determine suitable urgent care patient pathways via telephone triage. This strategy is promoted by policymakers but how it is performed, and its effectiveness has not been evaluated. Evaluation of early senior decision-making requires knowledge of decision-processes, influences, and goals. Previous research has focused on diagnostic decision-making and rarely studied clinicians in the field.<h4>Method</h4>We triangulated analytic autoethnography of early expert decision-making with focused ethnography of experts and trainee doctors performing the task. The study took place in a medium-sized Acute Medical Unit which provided internal medical emergency care for a mixed urban and rural population in the UK. A grounded theoretical model of expert decision-making was created via Gioia Methodology. Decision types were categorised to identify differences in solutions as well as decision processes.<h4>Results</h4>The hallmarks of intuitive decision-making were found in most expert decisions. Experts made intuitive use of pattern-matching to extract key data from large volumes of information which triggered the spontaneous manifestation of solutions. Solutions were holistic and usually solitary. Upon manifestation solutions were consciously tested for viability with emotional affect playing a key role. Expert solutions were previously applied ones but were frequently entirely novel. Novel solution generation was not a feature of trainee decisions but moments of intuition were. Expert goals varied between optimal care for individual patients, system-wide efficiency, and equity of care. The decision environment had a large influence upon experts.<h4>Conclusion</h4>Expert clinicians employ intuitive decision-making supported by rational analysis in early urgent care decision-making. Expert solutions generated in this manner are pragmatic rather than optimal, context dependent, and seek to achieve goals which vary from moment-moment. Findings are crucial to inform research evaluating the effectiveness of early expert decision-making in urgent care as it is a high cost strategy. They also have implications for methodological approaches in future studies of expert clinical decision-making, developing artificial expert systems, and clinician training.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0311748
spellingShingle Nicola Irvine
Robert Van Der Meer
Itamar Megiddo
Expert decision-making in clinicians: An auto-analytic ethnographic study of operational decision-making in urgent care.
PLoS ONE
title Expert decision-making in clinicians: An auto-analytic ethnographic study of operational decision-making in urgent care.
title_full Expert decision-making in clinicians: An auto-analytic ethnographic study of operational decision-making in urgent care.
title_fullStr Expert decision-making in clinicians: An auto-analytic ethnographic study of operational decision-making in urgent care.
title_full_unstemmed Expert decision-making in clinicians: An auto-analytic ethnographic study of operational decision-making in urgent care.
title_short Expert decision-making in clinicians: An auto-analytic ethnographic study of operational decision-making in urgent care.
title_sort expert decision making in clinicians an auto analytic ethnographic study of operational decision making in urgent care
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0311748
work_keys_str_mv AT nicolairvine expertdecisionmakingincliniciansanautoanalyticethnographicstudyofoperationaldecisionmakinginurgentcare
AT robertvandermeer expertdecisionmakingincliniciansanautoanalyticethnographicstudyofoperationaldecisionmakinginurgentcare
AT itamarmegiddo expertdecisionmakingincliniciansanautoanalyticethnographicstudyofoperationaldecisionmakinginurgentcare