| Literature DB >> 24203860 |
Abstract
Unlike novices, expert clinicians develop refined schemes and strategies that predictably allow them to provide a better quality, prompt and less error-prone patient care input. Empowering novices with cognitive aids or mental schemes as early as possible in their clinical career may significantly improve their critical thinking, problem-solving and decision-making skills. These cognitive aids may also improve trainees' use of evidence-based medicine in addition to reducing their diagnostic errors and improving their therapeutic care inputs.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24203860 PMCID: PMC3824754 DOI: 10.1007/s40037-013-0070-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Perspect Med Educ ISSN: 2212-2761
Actions map for a patient encounter and their cognitive schemes
| Step | Clinical action | Scheme/cognitive aid |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Gather information (history and physical) | – |
| 2 | Propose a diagnosis | Pattern-recognition hypothetico-deductive strategies and smart heuristics, rule-out worst scenario, red flags, etc. |
| 3 | Differential diagnosis | Differential diagnosis cognitive aids: anatomical, physiological, pathological |
| 4 | Order tests (rationally) | Frugal heuristics probability assessment: test sensitivity, specificity and likelihood ratios |
| 5 | Confirm and comprehensively give a diagnostic label | Guideline-friendly bedside diagnosis, aetiology, severity (BESD) |
| 6 | Therapeutic interventions | Contextual, patient-centred therapeutic cognitive aid: site of care, symptomatic, supportive, specific and speciality referral (5S) |
| 7 | Prepare for discharge | Assess response to treatment (subjective and objective), criteria for discharge, timing of follow-up (ACT) |
Summarizing the history and physical examination
| Comprehensive but concise, text-book-like: |
| Must contain patient’s name, gender, age, ±occupation, ±nationality, ±racial/geographic origin, relevant past history/social history/family history, drug/allergic history, symptoms +duration—in technical terms, relevant physical signs in technical conclusive terms |
Differential diagnosis cognitive aids
| Anatomical differential diagnosis | Physiological differential diagnosis | Aetiopathological differential diagnosis |
|---|---|---|
|
|
| Congenital or hereditary |
|
|
| Acquired |
| 1. Traumatic | ||
| 2. Infective: viral, bacterial etc. | ||
| 3. Inflammatory/auto-immune | ||
| 4. Vascular/degenerative | ||
| 5. Neoplastic/para-neoplastic | ||
| 6. Metabolic/endocrine | ||
| 7. Drug-induced/poisoning | ||
| 8. Deficiency diseases | ||
| 9. Psychogenic | ||
| 10. Idiopathic/cryptogenic |
Sensitivity, specificity and likelihood ratios: definitions and examples
| Sensitivity |
|
| How often is the test result correct for persons in whom the disease is known to be present? | |
| Sensitivity—the proportion of people | |
| Specificity |
|
| How often is the test result correct for persons in whom the disease is known to be absent? | |
| Specificity—the proportion of people | |
| Likelihood ratio |
|
| The likelihood that a given test result would be expected in a patient with the target disorder compared with the likelihood that the same result would be expected in a patient without that disorder. | |
| In general, a positive likelihood ratio of |
A case scenario illustrating the use of the ‘technical’ expert summary, BESD, pathological differential diagnosis and 5S therapeutic interventions
| • 67-year-old male | |
| • Bird/pigeon breeder, smoker | |
| • 3-day history of fever, cough with yellow sputum, left stabbing chest pain that is worse with breathing and coughing and breathlessness | |
| • Clinically, breathless, cyanosed, disoriented to time, person and place, | |
| Temperature 39.1 °C | |
| • BP 86/50 mmHg, RR 32/min, bilateral coarse crepitations, bronchial breathing left lower zone | |
| • Chest X-ray: left basal consolidation | |
| Summary | |
| 67-year-old, smoker and bird-breeder presenting with a 3-day history of productive cough, dyspnoea and left pleuritic chest pains | |
| Clinically confused, cyanosed, febrile, tachypnoiec and hypotensive with signs of left lower zone consolidation | |
| 1. Bedside-clinical diagnosis | Community acquired pneumonia with septic shock |
| 2. Cause/precipitant | Chlamydia psittaci |
| Aetio-pathological differential diagnosis | |
| Other Infections: e.g. avian flu, cryptococcal infection | |
| Inflammatory e.g. collagenosis, allergic alveolitis | |
| Vascular e.g. pulmonary embolism | |
| Neoplastic, drug-induced etc. | |
| 3. Severity | Life-threatening (CURB-65 = 4) |
| 4. Site of care | ICU |
| 5. Symptomatic | Analgesia, anti-pyretic |
| 6. Supportive | Oxygen, intravenous fluids |
| 7. Specific | Antibiotics |
| 8. Speciality referral | Intensive therapy unit, pulmonary service |
Fig. 1Diagnosis and therapy cognitive maps