| Literature DB >> 31025307 |
Harish Thampy1, Emma Willert2, Subha Ramani3.
Abstract
Clinical reasoning is a core component of clinical competency that is used in all patient encounters from simple to complex presentations. It involves synthesis of myriad clinical and investigative data, to generate and prioritize an appropriate differential diagnosis and inform safe and targeted management plans.The literature is rich with proposed methods to teach this critical skill to trainees of all levels. Yet, ensuring that reasoning ability is appropriately assessed across the spectrum of knowledge acquisition to workplace-based clinical performance can be challenging.In this perspective, we first introduce the concepts of illness scripts and dual-process theory that describe the roles of analytic system 1 and non-analytic system 2 reasoning in clinical decision making. Thereafter, we draw upon existing evidence and expert opinion to review a range of methods that allow for effective assessment of clinical reasoning, contextualized within Miller's pyramid of learner assessment. Key assessment strategies that allow teachers to evaluate their learners' clinical reasoning ability are described from the level of knowledge acquisition, through to real-world demonstration in the clinical workplace.Entities:
Keywords: clinical reasoning; medical education-assessment method; medical education-assessment/evaluation; medical education-cognition/problem solving
Year: 2019 PMID: 31025307 PMCID: PMC6667400 DOI: 10.1007/s11606-019-04953-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gen Intern Med ISSN: 0884-8734 Impact factor: 5.128
Figure 1Miller’s pyramid of clinical competence (supplied also as a .tif file). Adapted from Miller[2].
Examples of Cognitive Biases
| Cognitive bias | Description |
|---|---|
| Anchoring bias | The tendency to over rely on, and base decisions on, the first piece of information elicited/offered |
| Confirmation bias | The tendency to look for evidence to confirm a diagnostic hypothesis rather than evidence to refute it |
| Availability bias | The tendency to over rely on, and base decisions on, recently encountered cases/diagnoses |
| Search satisficing | The tendency to stop searching for other diagnoses after one diagnosis appears to fit |
| Diagnosis momentum | The tendency to continue relying on an initial diagnostic label assigned to a patient by another clinician |
| Ambiguity effect | The tendency to make diagnoses for which the probability is known over those for which the probability is unknown |
Suggested OSCE design strategies
| Station type | Design strategies |
|---|---|
| History taking stations | Create simulated patient scripts such that not all possible symptoms are present and/or add in symptoms that may suggest more than one plausible differential diagnosis |
| Include end-of-station examiner questions that require candidates to not only name, but also justify, their likely differential diagnoses | |
| In longer stations, consider stop-start techniques in which candidates are asked at different time points to list their differential diagnoses | |
| Physical examination stations | Design hypothesis-driven or presentation-based
examinations (requiring the candidate to conduct an
appropriate examination from a stated differential list or
short clinical vignette) rather than full system-based
examinations[ |
| Data interpretation stations | Utilize clinical data (either at once or
sequentially) along with a clinical vignette and examiner
questions to assess not just the candidate’s data |
| Explanation stations | Provide clinical results/data requiring candidate interpretation and offering real-world clinical context to base explanations and justifications |
Observable Behaviors of Clinical Reasoning During Patient Interactions
| Level 1 | Student acts | Taking the lead in the conversation |
| Recognizing and responding to relevant information | ||
| Specifying symptoms | ||
| Asking specific questions pointing to pathophysiological thinking | ||
| Putting questions in a logical order | ||
| Checking with patients | ||
| Summarizing | ||
| Body language | ||
| Level 2 | Patient acts | Patient body language, expressions of understanding or confusion |
| Level 3 | Course of the conversation | Students and patients talking at cross purposes, repetition |
| Level 4 | Data gathered and efficiency | Quantity and quality of data gathered |
| Speed of data gathering |
Based on Haring et al.[31]
Figure 2Steps and strategies for clinical reasoning (supplied also as a .tif file). Adapted from Bowen JL. Educational strategies to promote clinical diagnostic reasoning.. 2006;355(21):2217–25.
Clinical reasoning steps based on Bowen's model, potential methods of assessment for each step and corresponding one-minute preceptor strategies
| Clinical reasoning step from Bowen’s model | Potential assessment methods | Corresponding strategies from the one-minute preceptor model |
|---|---|---|
| Data acquisition | Direct observation of patient encounter to assess history taking and physical exam skills | |
| Case presentation: does the detailed presentation of history and physical exam contain important information? | ||
| Accurate problem representation | Direct observation: questions (pertinent positives and negatives) posed during history taking, targeted physical examination | Getting to a commitment |
| Case presentation: | ||
| -Organization of presentation | ||
| -Conciseness and accuracy of summary statement | ||
| Generation of hypothesis | Chart-stimulated recall | Probe for supportive evidence |
Case presentation: -Formulation of differential diagnosis linked to clinical data -Prioritization of diagnoses | ||
| Direct observation | ||
| -Questions posed to patients | ||
| -Targeted physical exam | ||
| Questioning to explore reasons for selection of differential diagnoses | ||
| Selection of illness scripts | Chart-stimulated recall -Explanation of assessment and plans in case write ups | Probe for supportive evidence |
Questioning -Assess application of clinical knowledge -Compare and contrast illness scripts developed by teachers | Teach general rules | |
Think out loud -Steps taken to generate and narrow diagnostic hypotheses | ||
| Diagnosis | Case presentation -Specific diagnosis reached | Provide feedback |
Questioning -Narrow differential diagnosis | -Tell learners about appropriate use of analytic and non-analytic reasoning -Gently point out errors |
| If you were thinking of: | And then you find: | This diagnosis becomes |
| Q1: Lung cancer | Patient has smoked 20 cigarettes a day for 30 years | − 2 − 1 0 + 1 + 2 |
| Q2: Drug side effect | Patient started ace inhibitor 6 weeks ago | − 2 − 1 0 + 1 + 2 |
| Q3: COPD | Patient has never smoked | − 2 − 1 0 + 1 + 2 |
− 2 Ruled out or almost ruled out; − 1 Less likely; 0 Neither more nor less likely; + 1 More likely; + 2 Certain or almost certain