Literature DB >> 33629614

Educational Intervention Reduced Family Medicine Residents' Intention to Request Diagnostic Tests: Results of a Controlled Trial.

Antonius Schneider1,2, Markus Bühner3, Therese Herzog1,2, Siona Laverty1,2, Stefanie Ziehfreund1,2, Alexander Hapfelmeier1,4, Dagmar Schneider2,5, Pascal O Berberat6, Marco Roos2,7.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Dealing with uncertainty is a core competence for physicians. To evaluate the impact of an educational intervention on family medicine residents' (FMRs') intention to request diagnostic tests and their attitudes toward uncertainty.
METHODS: Nonrandomized controlled trial. Intervention group (IG) FMRs participated in interactive "dealing with uncertainty" seminars comprising statistical lessons and diagnostic reasoning. Control group (CG) FMRs participated in seminars without in-depth diagnostic lessons. FMRs completed the Dealing with Uncertainty Questionnaire (DUQ), comprising the Diagnostic Action and Diagnostic Reasoning scales. The Physicians' Reaction to Uncertainty (PRU) questionnaire, comprising 4 scales (Anxiety Due to Uncertainty, Concern about Bad Outcomes, Reluctance to Disclose Uncertainty to Patients, and Reluctance to Disclose Mistakes to Physicians) was also completed. Follow-up was performed 3 months later. Differences were calculated with repeated-measures analysis of variance.
RESULTS: In total, 107 FMRs of the IG and 102 FMRs of the CG participated at baseline and follow-up. The mean (SD) Diagnostic Action scale score decreased from 24.0 (4.8) to 22.9 (5.1) in the IG and increased in the CG from 23.7 (5.4) to 24.1 (5.4), showing significant group difference (P = 0.006). The Diagnostic Reasoning scale increased significantly (P = 0.025) without a significant group difference (P = 0.616), from 19.2 (2.6) to 19.7 (2.4) in the IG and from 18.1 (3.3) to 18.8 (3.2) in the CG. The PRU scale Anxiety Due to Uncertainty decreased significantly (P = 0.029) without a significant group difference (P = 0.116), from 20.5 (4.8) to 18.5 (5.5) in the IG and from 19.9 (5.5) to 19.0 (6.0) in the CG.
CONCLUSION: The structured seminar reduced self-rated diagnostic test requisition. The change in Anxiety Due to Uncertainty and Diagnostic Reasoning might be due to an unspecific accompanying effect of the extra-occupational seminars for residents.

Entities:  

Keywords:  diagnostic reasoning; diagnostic test; family medicine; residency; uncertainty

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33629614     DOI: 10.1177/0272989X21989692

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Decis Making        ISSN: 0272-989X            Impact factor:   2.583


  1 in total

1.  The "Seminartage Weiterbildung Allgemeinmedizin" (SemiWAM®) - development, implementation and evaluation of a five-year, competence-based postgraduate programme in Bavaria.

Authors:  Marco Roos; Antonius Schneider; Jochen Gensichen; Anne Simmenroth; Thomas Kühlein; Dagmar Schneider
Journal:  GMS J Med Educ       Date:  2022-04-14
  1 in total

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