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How genetic fallacy can impact your practice and decision-making.
Manage episode 401428690 series 2701386
When decision-makers in healthcare are approached with sound advice, but it arrives at their front door from a source "outside" healthcare, why is it so quickly dismissed?
One might say, "I don't want anyone telling me how to practice medicine?"
The advice may have nothing to do with what happens inside the exam room, but it is about how your staff communicates with your patients in such a way that makes the Patient feel like an inconvenience.
Today, I want to unpack something you may have learned about in your undergraduate studies. It's called the genetic fallacy.
The genetic fallacy is a logical fallacy that occurs when someone dismisses an argument or idea based on its origins or history rather than evaluating the concept on its own merits, not the source. This fallacy assumes that something must be either true or false based on who and where it came from rather than being judged based on its qualities.
For example, a hospital administrator might reject an idea from a Physician simply because it was suggested by someone they don't like or someone with a history of making unpopular suggestions without carefully considering the proposal's strengths and weaknesses. Sound familiar?
Alternatively, a medical practice might continue to invest in a SaaS, EMR, or outdated process because it has always done so. However, whether it is still the best course of action today still needs to be examined.
© Concierge Medicine Today, LLC. ("CMT") All rights reserved.
Disclaimers: All content presented here is for general information purposes only. It is NOT intended to provide medical, legal, professional, accounting or financial advice. No warranties or guarantees are assumed or implied and user(s) releases Concierge Medicine Today, LLC, its agents, representatives, affiliated brands/companies and/or guests from all damages, liability and/or claims. Be advised, some references, companies, individuals, products, services, resources and/or links may be out-of-date. Concierge Medicine Today, LLC does not update content past its release date. User(s) assume all risk and liability with any use of the content as well as third party links. Concierge Medicine Today, LLC., has no formal peer review and, therefore, cannot guarantee the validity of information and/or content contained on its web sites, podcasts, and/or all content it produces or releases. While some of our speakers may be licensed Physicians, they are not your Physician. Please consult your Physician related to anything you may have read or heard or have questions about or call 911. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed are the speaker’s own and do not necessarily represent the views, thoughts, and/or opinions of Concierge Medicine Today, LLC. The "Concierge Medicine Today, LLC" ("CMT") name and all forms and abbreviations are the property of its owner and its use does not imply endorsement of or opposition to any specific organization, product, or service. Additional disclaimers, releases, terms of use and conditions apply also to the production and/or use of this content, https://conciergemedicinetoday.org/tcpp/.
334 епізодів
Manage episode 401428690 series 2701386
When decision-makers in healthcare are approached with sound advice, but it arrives at their front door from a source "outside" healthcare, why is it so quickly dismissed?
One might say, "I don't want anyone telling me how to practice medicine?"
The advice may have nothing to do with what happens inside the exam room, but it is about how your staff communicates with your patients in such a way that makes the Patient feel like an inconvenience.
Today, I want to unpack something you may have learned about in your undergraduate studies. It's called the genetic fallacy.
The genetic fallacy is a logical fallacy that occurs when someone dismisses an argument or idea based on its origins or history rather than evaluating the concept on its own merits, not the source. This fallacy assumes that something must be either true or false based on who and where it came from rather than being judged based on its qualities.
For example, a hospital administrator might reject an idea from a Physician simply because it was suggested by someone they don't like or someone with a history of making unpopular suggestions without carefully considering the proposal's strengths and weaknesses. Sound familiar?
Alternatively, a medical practice might continue to invest in a SaaS, EMR, or outdated process because it has always done so. However, whether it is still the best course of action today still needs to be examined.
© Concierge Medicine Today, LLC. ("CMT") All rights reserved.
Disclaimers: All content presented here is for general information purposes only. It is NOT intended to provide medical, legal, professional, accounting or financial advice. No warranties or guarantees are assumed or implied and user(s) releases Concierge Medicine Today, LLC, its agents, representatives, affiliated brands/companies and/or guests from all damages, liability and/or claims. Be advised, some references, companies, individuals, products, services, resources and/or links may be out-of-date. Concierge Medicine Today, LLC does not update content past its release date. User(s) assume all risk and liability with any use of the content as well as third party links. Concierge Medicine Today, LLC., has no formal peer review and, therefore, cannot guarantee the validity of information and/or content contained on its web sites, podcasts, and/or all content it produces or releases. While some of our speakers may be licensed Physicians, they are not your Physician. Please consult your Physician related to anything you may have read or heard or have questions about or call 911. The views, thoughts, and opinions expressed are the speaker’s own and do not necessarily represent the views, thoughts, and/or opinions of Concierge Medicine Today, LLC. The "Concierge Medicine Today, LLC" ("CMT") name and all forms and abbreviations are the property of its owner and its use does not imply endorsement of or opposition to any specific organization, product, or service. Additional disclaimers, releases, terms of use and conditions apply also to the production and/or use of this content, https://conciergemedicinetoday.org/tcpp/.
334 епізодів
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