| Literature DB >> 27429275 |
C Scott Smith1,2, William Hill3, Chris Francovich4,5, Magdalena Morris6,7, Bruce Robbins8, Lynne Robins9, Andrew Turner10.
Abstract
We aimed to study linguistic and non-linguistic elements of diagnostic reasoning across the continuum of medical education. We performed semi-structured interviews of premedical students, first year medical students, third year medical students, second year internal medicine residents, and experienced faculty (ten each) as they diagnosed three common causes of dyspnea. A second observer recorded emotional tone. All interviews were digitally recorded and blinded transcripts were created. Propositional analysis and concept mapping were performed. Grounded theory was used to identify salient categories and transcripts were scored with these categories. Transcripts were then unblinded. Systematic differences in propositional structure, number of concept connections, distribution of grounded theory categories, episodic and semantic memories, and emotional tone were identified. Summary concept maps were created and grounded theory concepts were explored for each learning level. We identified three major findings: (1) The "apprentice effect" in novices (high stress and low narrative competence); (2) logistic concept growth in intermediates; and (3) a cognitive state transition (between analytical and intuitive approaches) in experts. These findings warrant further study and comparison.Entities:
Keywords: curriculum; diagnostic reasoning; emotional stress; graduate medical education; narrative medicine; personal narratives; professional competence; undergraduate medical education
Year: 2014 PMID: 27429275 PMCID: PMC4934589 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare2030253
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Average numbe of propositions per disease group and number of concept connections in concept maps by training level.
| Training Level | Average # of Propositions Per Disease Group (Standard Deviation) | Percentage of Total Words that Are Propositions | Number of Concept Connections in Summary Concept Map |
|---|---|---|---|
| PM | 4.2 (2) | 2.7% | 30 |
| MS1 | 2.3 (1.8) | 1.4% | 25 |
| MS3 | 8.4 (3.1) | 5.5% | 34 |
| R2 | 12.4 (5.4) | 7.8% | 56 |
| F | 9.6 (4.2) | 4.3% | 35 |
PM = premedical student; MS1 = first year medical student, MS3 = third year medical student, R2 = second year internal medicine resident, F = experienced medical faculty.
Figure 1Average word count and propositions per subject.
Grounded theory categories and definitions.
| Category Title | Definition |
|---|---|
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| Where the participant relates personal experience related to a specific other(s). Each specific other is another story. |
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| A list of cues generated to explain or define diagnosis. |
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| The absence of an expected cue or the presence of a cue that negates a diagnosis. |
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| Referral to personal experience by participant as a guide for diagnostic thinking. |
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| Where participants refer to or include a “we” or group identifier to their language. |
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| Where some effort is made to formalize an argument for a diagnosis. |
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| Where the participant explicitly refers to patient history to help them make a diagnosis. |
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| Explicit specific reference to the physical exam as the source of information for the diagnosis. |
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| Where there is reference to two or more target diagnoses or other complex factors complicating accurate response to the diagnostic question. |
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| Participants rely on a general rule or algorithm to respond completely to the question. |
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| Commentary or conversation around the broader implications of a diagnosis. Intersection of diagnosis and wider social world. |
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| Where the participant appears to struggle with the definition or list of disease or diagnosis. |
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| Participant refers to the symptoms associated with an ailment. |
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| Using any terminology most lay persons wouldn’t know. |
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| Participant language that suggests or refers to some sort of test to determine diagnosis. |
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| A referral by the participant to a medical intervention. |
Figure 2Average number of text units by training level for five key categories: struggling with disease definition, history, physical exam, tests, and disconfirming cue.
Classification of responses to the trigger question, “Can you remember anyone with this disease?”
| Memory Episodes | PM | MS1 | MS3 | R2 | F |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Explanation | 1 | 1 | 4 | 9 | 6 |
| Prediction | 0 | 0 | 5 | 10 | 3 |
| Prototype | 4 | 3 | 12 | 25 | 40 |
| Qualifier | 1 | 2 | 13 | 15 | 23 |
PM—premedical student; MS1—first year medical student; MS3—third year medical student; R2—second year internal medicine resident; F—faculty member.
Figure 3The logistic growth of diagnostic reasoning skills observed in intermediate learners.
Figure 4Average number of coded text units per transcript for residents and faculty members that were simultaneously coded as cue generation and experience, symptoms, or physical exam.
Figure 5Zone map comparing complexity of the conceptual model versus experience.
Figure 6The cognitive landscape showing a critical fold, typical learner trajectory (in red) and a critical state change that occurs with combinations of experience and cognitive off-loading.