Literature DB >> 22722355

Examining the diagnostic justification abilities of fourth-year medical students.

Reed G Williams1, Debra L Klamen.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Fostering ability to organize and use medical knowledge to guide data collection, make diagnostic decisions, and defend those decisions is at the heart of medical training. However, these abilities are not systematically examined prior to graduation. This study examined diagnostic justification (DXJ) ability of medical students shortly before graduation.
METHOD: All senior medical students in the Classes of 2011 (n = 67) and 2012 (n = 70) at Southern Illinois University were required to take and pass a 14-case, standardized patient examination prior to graduation. For nine cases, students were required to write a free-text response indicating how they used patient data to move from their differential to their final diagnosis. Two physicians graded each DXJ response. DXJ scores were compared with traditional standardized patient examination (SCCX) scores.
RESULTS: The average intraclass correlation between raters' rankings of DXJ responses was 0.75 and 0.64 for the Classes of 2011 and 2012, respectively. Student DXJ scores were consistent across the nine cases. Using SCCX and DXJ scores led to the same pass-fail decision in a majority of cases. However, there were many cases where discrepancies occurred. In a majority of those cases, students would fail using the DXJ score but pass using the SCCX score. Common DXJ errors are described.
CONCLUSIONS: Commonly used standardized patient examination component scores (history/physical examination checklist score, findings, differential diagnosis, diagnosis) are not direct, comprehensive measures of DXJ ability. Critical deficiencies in DXJ abilities may thus go undiscovered.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22722355     DOI: 10.1097/ACM.0b013e31825cfcff

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Med        ISSN: 1040-2446            Impact factor:   6.893


  4 in total

1.  Neurology objective structured clinical examination reliability using generalizability theory.

Authors:  Angela D Blood; Yoon Soo Park; Rimas V Lukas; James R Brorson
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  2015-10-02       Impact factor: 9.910

2.  Exploring cognitive integration of basic science and its effect on diagnostic reasoning in novices.

Authors:  Kristina Lisk; Anne M R Agur; Nicole N Woods
Journal:  Perspect Med Educ       Date:  2016-06

Review 3.  Advancing the assessment of clinical reasoning across the health professions: Definitional and methodologic recommendations.

Authors:  David Gordon; Joseph J Rencic; Valerie J Lang; Aliki Thomas; Meredith Young; Steven J Durning
Journal:  Perspect Med Educ       Date:  2022-03-07

4.  Deficiency areas in decision making in undergraduate medical students.

Authors:  Zalika Klemenc-Ketis; Janko Kersnik
Journal:  Adv Med Educ Pract       Date:  2014-07-16
  4 in total

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