| Literature DB >> 33141098 |
Andrew Lukas Yin1,2, Pargol Gheissari2, Inna Wanyin Lin2, Michael Sobolev2,3, John P Pollak2,4, Curtis Cole4,5, Deborah Estrin2,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lifelong learning is embedded in the culture of medicine, but there are limited tools currently available for many clinicians, including hospitalists, to help improve their own practice. Although there are requirements for continuing medical education, resources for learning new clinical guidelines, and developing fields aimed at facilitating peer-to-peer feedback, there is a gap in the availability of tools that enable clinicians to learn based on their own patients and clinical decisions.Entities:
Keywords: assessment; digital health; electronic medical record; feedback; hospitalist; learning; self-assessment; self-learning
Year: 2020 PMID: 33141098 PMCID: PMC7671832 DOI: 10.2196/23299
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Internet Res ISSN: 1438-8871 Impact factor: 5.428
Descriptions of themes and subthemes.
| Themes and subthemes | Description | |
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| I.I: Physicians are looking for feedback | Whether new or seasoned, physicians use many currently available resources to gather feedback for themselves but have difficulty sharing feedback with one another and are still looking for more for themselves. |
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| I.II: Physicians have specific people they consult for feedback | In reviewing past decisions, physicians defer to a close ring of current or past colleagues or family members in the medical field rather than purposefully finding external experts or people they are less comfortable with. |
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| I.III: Physicians interpret feedback more negatively than likely intended | Although feedback is usually not intended to do so, physicians tend to have a strong, negative emotional response to the feedback they receive. |
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| II.I: Physicians have go-to resources for learning | Participants have an array of resources they readily rely on for learning, with little variation among participants. |
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| II.II: Physicians build workarounds | Physicians build and maintain workarounds to obtain information of interest, but they find them to be inefficient and time-consuming. |
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| II.III: Medicine can feel like a solo sport | Although the practice of medicine is commonly thought of as a team environment, participants sometimes feel they are acting on their own, which can be challenging. |
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| III.I: Physicians like numbers but need more context | With the current data available, physicians find it challenging to create actionable learning points as the data usually do not capture enough context. |
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| III.II: Physicians cannot always find the “right” answer | There may not be a “right” answer in medicine much of the time, and physicians have a hard time finding out if their actions in the past were the best actions given the situation at the time. |
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| III.III: Physicians’ actions are limited by uncertainty about workplace cultural expectations | Uncertainty with workplace cultural or collaborative expectations creates friction for them in giving feedback. |