Mark is an Adjunct Senior Lecturer in the University of South Australia with 35 years’ experience teaching undergraduate and postgraduate physiotherapy.
And he has been on one of the major contributors to the development of clinical reasoning theory within MSK healthcare in the last 30 years, and we discuss some of his key work, including the seminal work with the late Louis Gifford and Ian Edwards (see Ian's work on clinical reasoning herehere and here).
Clinical reasoning within a biopsychosocial framework.
Diagnostic reasoning approaches such as hypothetico-deductive reasoning and pattern recognition.
Clinical reasoning in novice compared to expert clinicians.
And finally we discuss the role of metacognition to mitigating errors in reasoning.
So it was truly and honour speaking with Mark. The label ‘pioneer’ is probably over used, but in Mark’s case it captures his status perfectly. His work on clinical reasoning theory was one of the cornerstones of my own doctoral work into clinical reasoning (see herehere and here) and helped make explicit the processes behind my thinking and doing in my clinical practice – which up until engaging with Mark’s work were completely unbeknownst to me.
His knowledge of the field is incredibly extensive as is his ability to communicate and make this information accessible to clinicians and students.
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