Literature DB >> 16808427

What healthcare students do with what they don't know: the socializing power of 'uncertainty' in the case presentation.

Marlee M Spafford1, Catherine F Schryer, Lorelei Lingard, Patricia K Hrynchak.   

Abstract

Healthcare students learn to manage clinical uncertainty amid the tensions that emerge between clinical omniscience and the 'truth for now' realities of the knowledge explosion in healthcare. The case presentation provides a portal to viewing the practitioner's ability to manage uncertainty. We examined the communicative features of uncertainty in 31 novice optometry case presentations and considered how these features contributed to the development of professional identity in optometry students. We also reflected on how these features compared with our earlier study of medical students' case presentations. Optometry students, like their counterparts in medicine, displayed a novice rhetoric of uncertainty that focused on personal deficits in knowledge. While optometry and medical students shared aspects of this rhetoric (seeking guidance and deflecting criticism), optometry students displayed instances of owning limits while medical students displayed instances of proving competence. We found that the nature of this novice rhetoric was shaped by professional identity (a tendency to assume an attitude of moral authority or defer to a higher authority) and the clinical setting (inpatient versus outpatient settings). More explicit discussions regarding uncertainty may help the novice unlock the code of contextual forces that cue the savvy member of the community to sanctioned discursive strategies.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 16808427     DOI: 10.1515/CAM.2006.008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Commun Med        ISSN: 1612-1783


  4 in total

1.  It's not just what you know: junior trainees' approach to follow-up and documentation.

Authors:  Dani C Cadieux; Mark Goldszmidt
Journal:  Med Educ       Date:  2017-04-18       Impact factor: 6.251

2.  The Reality of Uncertainty in Mental Health Care Settings Seeking Professional Integration: A Mixed-Methods Approach.

Authors:  Chiara Pomare; Louise A Ellis; Kate Churruca; Janet C Long; Jeffrey Braithwaite
Journal:  Int J Integr Care       Date:  2018-12-19       Impact factor: 5.120

3.  We lived and breathed medicine - then life catches up: medical students' reflections.

Authors:  Mia Hemborg Kristiansson; Margareta Troein; Annika Brorsson
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2014-04-01       Impact factor: 2.463

4.  Implicit expression of uncertainty - suggestion of an empirically derived framework.

Authors:  Julia Gärtner; Pascal O Berberat; Martina Kadmon; Sigrid Harendza
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2020-03-20       Impact factor: 2.463

  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.