Should We Provide a Clinical Diagnosis for People with Shoulder Pain? Absolutely, Maybe, Never! The Ongoing Clinical Debate Between Leavers and Retainers
Date
2022Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
When trauma results in a fracture of one of the shoulder bones,
or a dislocation of one of the shoulder joints, providing a
diagnosis is acceptable practice. Similarly, providing a diagnosis
for the person seeking an explanation for their shoulder
symptoms when an osteosarcoma is discovered in the humeral
head is also viewed as acceptable. In these situations, the
diagnosis is sensitively communicated, explained and, following
shared decision-making, a management plan started, and
modified as required.
However, the awkward reality is that most people seek care with
a history of idiopathic and non-traumatic shoulder pain, and
here lies one of the most hotly contested debates pertaining to
clinical diagnosis in current clinical practice. On one side there
are clinicians who wish to jettison all diagnostic labels (leavers),
and on the other side are those who will fight to the end to
retain them (retainers)
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- Physical Therapy & Rehabilitation [74 items ]