Abstract

Vignette-based methodologies are frequently used to examine judgments and decision-making processes, including clinical judgments made by health professionals. Concerns are sometimes raised that vignettes do not accurately reflect "real world" phenomena, and that this affects the validity of results and conclusions of these studies. This article provides an overview of the defining features, design variations, strengths, and weaknesses of vignette studies as a way of examining how health professionals form clinical judgments (e.g., assigning diagnoses, selecting treatments). As a "hybrid" of traditional survey and experimental methods, vignette studies can offer aspects of both the high internal validity of experiments and the high external validity of survey research in order to disentangle multiple predictors of clinician behavior. When vignette studies are well designed to test specific questions about judgments and decision-making, they can be highly generalizable to "real life" behavior, while overcoming the ethical, practical, and scientific limitations associated with alternative methods (e.g., observation, self-report, standardized patients, archival analysis). We conclude with methodological recommendations and a description of how vignette methodologies are being used to investigate clinicians' diagnostic decisions in case-controlled field studies for the ICD-11 classification of mental and behavioural disorders, and how these studies illustrate the preceding concepts and recommendations

Details

Title
Vignette methodologies for studying clinicians' decision-making: Validity, utility, and application in ICD-11 field studies *
Author
Evans, Spencer C; Roberts, Michael C; Keeley, Jared W; Blossom, Jennifer B; Amaro, Christina M; Garcia, Andrea M; Stough, Cathleen Odar; Canter, Kimberly S; Robles, Rebeca; Reed, Geoffrey M
Pages
160-170
Section
ARTÍCULO TEÓRICO
Publication year
2015
Publication date
2015
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
ISSN
16972600
e-ISSN
21740852
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1715642406
Copyright
Copyright Juan Carlos Sierra 2015