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International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Book | Chapter

204122

Complexity of knowledge in primary care

understanding the discipline's requisite knowledge—a bibliometric study

Frauke DunkelMartin Konitzer

pp. 147-164

Abstract

Postgraduate examinations ought to reflect the knowledge base of a discipline (as described in textbooks, journals and scientific conferences), but do they? This project has been an attempt to understand family medicine's requisite knowledge based on the content of two vocational examination samples between 2003 and 2005. The examination content was analysed bibliometrically.The analysis showed a hierarchy of concordance between exam topics and the discipline's knowledge domains of praxis, science and epidemiology, indicating that the exams fairly assess the candidates' internalisation of the discipline's practical knowledge.In addition there is a "nested similarity" between the disciplines knowledge base, its exam catalogue and the corpora of its defining knowledge domains. Finding that the exam content has a high level of concordance with EBM guidelines and general practice epidemiology indicates that the exam rightly focuses on problems of daily care.Future research has to explore if there is indeed a complex adaptive dynamic inherent in the postgraduate examination processes of German general practitioners.

Publication details

Published in:

Sturmberg Joachim P. (2018) Putting systems and complexity sciences into practice: sharing the experience. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 147-164

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-73636-5_11

Full citation:

Dunkel Frauke, Konitzer Martin (2018) „Complexity of knowledge in primary care: understanding the discipline's requisite knowledge—a bibliometric study“, In: J. P. Sturmberg (ed.), Putting systems and complexity sciences into practice, Dordrecht, Springer, 147–164.