
The Process of Shared Decision-Making
In the shared decision-making process, how are rehabilitation goals developed?
A) By identifying the most efficient interventions and directing the survivor to follow them as the medical expert in charge.
B) By combining your clinical expertise with the survivor’s lived experience to create a recovery plan that fits their real life.
C) By providing a detailed list of medical requirements to ensure the survivor understands the academic importance of the practice.
From Expert to Collaborator
Which of the following best describes why a shift from an "expert" mindset to a collaborative partner is essential for self-directed training?
A) It ensures the survivor moves from passive compliance to active ownership, which is necessary to sustain practice when the clinician is not directly present.
B) It allows the clinician to maintain control of the schedule while providing the survivor with more complex medical information.
C) It reinforces the biomedical model by ensuring that the clinician remains the sole director of the rehabilitation plan.
Ready to move on?
While a strong theoretical foundation is essential, professional readiness also requires a clear understanding of the environment where this reasoning is applied.
The next step is to examine the specific systemic and institutional factors that influence daily practice in the inpatient setting.