Affiliation:
1. Department of the History of Science, Harvard University, Science Center 235, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA.
Abstract
This paper describes the efforts of clinical scientists and computer experts to introduce computer diagnosis into the wards of a major Australian teaching hospital during the 1960s and 1970s. A logical-empiricist procedure construed as a `scientific' model of medical diagnosis — and thus challenging traditional physicians' claims of `craft knowledge' — had the potential to define a new social and institutional role for clinical research. In this account, the `craft' and `scientific' representations of diagnosis are treated symmetrically, as discursive resources used in a hospital context to legitimate the divergent competences of two competing occupational subgroups. Neither `skill' nor `science' is privileged as an explanatory framework. Attributions of skill — as of rationality — may serve distinct social goals and institutional interests. In order to secure a place for this diagnostic technology clinical scientists appealed to a scientific method that physicians were prepared to use rhetorically to bolster their diagnoses — but not, in the end, to redefine the diagnostic process. The institutional authority of physicians in this case allowed them to ignore a model of diagnosis that would circumvent their control of a crucial aspect of medical work.
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,General Social Sciences,History
Cited by
29 articles.
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