1st Edition
How to Think in Medicine Reasoning, Decision Making, and Communication in Health Sciences and Professions
Foreword
Introduction
Section 1: History and position of the problem, and the challenge of medical thinking. Philosophy for medicine: yesterday and today
Chapter 1: How did we get where we are today?
Chapter 2: Philosophy and medicine. How much are we philosophers?
Chapter 3: Art, craft, science: aren’t we also all this and above?
Chapter 4: Ways we see, learn, and practice medicine today
Chapter 5: General rules of critical thinking, argumentation, and logic in medical research and
practice
Chapter 6: The scientific method. Not only for science but for practice too!
Chapter 7: Evidence-based medicine, patient-centered and otherwise centered medicines, and
clinical practice sharing a common line of thought.
Section2: Philosophy interfacing topics of interest for health sciences and professions across
the cognitive process in health care and research
Chapter 8: Definitions of What we want to see and what we can do.
Chapter 9: Probabilities, uncertainties, risks, and other qualifications in health by steps of
clinical work
Chapter 10: Cause-effect relationships
Chapter 11: Thinking by steps of clinical and community care.
Section 3: Decision making in clinical and community health care, research, and practice
Chapter 12: Fundamentals of decision analysis and decision making
Chapter 13: Decision making in clinical and community care.
Chapter 14: Communication in research and practice.
Chapter 15: Writing medical articles; essays, scientific papers
Chapter 16: Clinical case and case series reporting
Chapter 17: Oral and written communication in clinical and community practice and care
Appendix 1: Other references
Appendix 2: Glossary
Biography
Milos Jenicek, MD, PhD is Professor of Epidemiology and Evidence-Based Medicine at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada. He is also Professor Emeritus at the Université de Montreal, Adjunct Professor at McGill University and Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada. In 2009, he was elected Fellow of the Royal Society of Medicine, London, UK.
He contributes to the evolution of epidemiology as a general method of objective reasoning and decision making in medicine. To further enhance his teaching and research, he has committed himself to short sabbaticals during which he visited Harvard and John Hopkins, Yale, North Carolina at Chapel Hill and Uniformed Services at Bethesda Universities. He also lectured and visited numerous institutions in Hong Kong, Singapore, Japan, South Korea, Portugal, Brazil, France, Switzerland, Morocco, Czech Republic, Singapore and Kuwait. Earlier in his career, he spent three years of University teaching and field practice of preventive medicine and public health in North Africa, which has given him valuable insight and understanding of the realities in this part of the world.
Milos Jenicek is a consultant to various national and international public and private bodies, Editorial Consultant for the Journal of Clinical epidemiology and the Case Reports & Clinical Practice Review and honorary editorial board member of Evidence-Based Preventive Medicine. In addition to numerous scientific papers, Dr. Jenicek is the author of twelve books, his most recent Evidence-Based Practice published by AMA Press in 2005, A Physician’s Self-Paced Guide to Critical Thinking (2006, AMA Press); Improving Communication and Decision Making in Research and Practice, (AMA Press, 2009) and Medical Error and Harm: Understanding, Prevention and Control (CRC Press, 2009).
Dr. Jenicek’s current interests include the development of methodology and applications of logic and critical thinking in health sciences, enhancement of evidence-based medicine and evidence-based public health, health policies, program evaluation, and decision oriented (bedside) clinical research.






