Guessology is a term I have used with my GP trainees when discussing the use of evidence in clinical medicine (1). The term is there to emphasise that evidence is an essential part of clinical decision making - but that evidence also has limitations that we, as primary care clinicians, have to evaluate and apply in order to use in clinical practice.
Examples of "guessology":
Medical therapeutic decisions can then never be totally deterministic, with simple predictable cause and effect, as each patient we are dealing with is an individual and we are basing evidence on populations where an intervention has been made. Also we cannot increase the accurary of applying evidence to real-life clinical situations by including multiple variables because of the constraints of the "combinatorial explosion" (2).
Therefore "guessology" is really a term reflecting the art of clinical medicine - and that the art of clinical medicine works cooperatively with the science in order to determine decisions in the best interests of individual patients.
Reference:
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