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Preventing Diagnostic Error

Teaching and Assessing Critical Reasoning in the Era of Competency-based Medical Education, Milestones and Entrustment . Preventing Diagnostic Error. “ We’re pretty sure it’s the West Nile virus.”. Clinical Reasoning: A Primer. Patient/situation characteristics. Prior knowledge.

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Preventing Diagnostic Error

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  1. Teaching and Assessing Critical Reasoning in the Era of Competency-based Medical Education, Milestones and Entrustment Preventing Diagnostic Error

  2. “We’re pretty sure it’s theWest Nile virus.”

  3. Clinical Reasoning: A Primer Patient/situation characteristics Prior knowledge Problem Representation Evaluation Action Information Gathering Context Gruppen and Frohna, International Handbook on Research, 2002

  4. Clinical Reasoning • Internal process • Trainees and faculty need ways to externalize and teach this process • Programs need assessment methods that document growth and competency in this skill

  5. Good Thinking Sensitivity Interest in gaining more information Seeking alternatives Inclination Willing to invest energy in thinking the matter through Ability Possess the cognitive ability “Bad Thinking” – “cognitive misers” Chose to take mental shortcuts, engage in heuristic thinking, without interest in “good thinking” Critical Thinking Krupat 2011

  6. Adverse Events and Clinical Reasoning • Graber¹ adverse event study: • Most errors combination of individual and systems factors • Average 5.9 system +/- cognitive error per case • “Cognitive factors” • 320 cognitive factors in 74 cases • 45 due to faulty data gathering • 264 due to faulty synthesis (problem representation – clinical reasoning) ¹ Arch Intern Med. 2005; 165: 1493.

  7. The Process of Clinical Reasoning

  8. How can clinical reasoning be taught and assessed in a competency-based system to reduce diagnostic error?

  9. CBME - a new paradigm You must truly know the trainee has demonstrated competence and is ready to progress to the next stage of their training or career: • Requires clear definition of expected outcomes (“good thinking” with decrease in diagnostic errors) • Requires assessment and evaluation systems capable of demonstrating that these things are done consistently and within the contextual needs of the clinical environment

  10. Requirements • The content of “good thinking” • Define the K/S/A of “good thinking” and frame as an entrustment • An assessment and evaluation system • Faculty Development – creating a shared “mental model” or understanding of “good thinking” and how it is assessed and evaluated

  11. The Content - Twelve Tips “to prevent diagnostic error” • Understand heuristics • Use “diagnostic timeouts” • Think “worst-case scenario medicine” • Systematic approach to common problems • Ask why • Teach/emphasize physical exam • Teach Bayesian theory • Acknowledge your emotions • Identify what doesn’t fit • Embrace zebras • “Slow down” • Admit mistakes Trowbridge Medical Teacher 2008

  12. The “Twelve Tips” and the Internal Medicine Curricular Milestones • 142 discrete milestones published in 2009 • Describe developmentally the discrete K/S/A needed for competency in the six ACGME General Competencies • Cross walking the 12 tips against the milestones identifies at least 28 milestones that capture the knowledge, skills or attitudes that could be used to teach and assess critical reasoning.

  13. Patient Care Sub-competency

  14. “Entrustment in Medical Education” Focused assessments around what faculty and training programs “entrust” trainees to do? Think critically to minimize error Reflects the most important outcome of training: a trainee’s readiness to bear professional responsibility”

  15. http://www.im.org/AcademicAffairs/milestones/Pages/default.aspxhttp://www.im.org/AcademicAffairs/milestones/Pages/default.aspx

  16. How do I develop an assessment? Step 1 – Describe the activity. What tasks constitute the entrustment. Step 2 – Identify the Curricular Milestones (142) that will help you assess a resident performing this activity. Step 3 – Identify specific assessment methods / tools to which you can apply the chosen Curricular Milestones.

  17. Clinical Reasoning Step 1 – Describe the activity. What tasks are required for you to entrust this activity to a resident? The “Good Thinker” as described by the twelve tips cross walked to the Internal Medicine Curricular Milestones.

  18. Twelve Tips “to prevent diagnostic error” – The “Good Thinker” Entrustment • Understand heuristics • Use “diagnostic timeouts” • Think “worst-case scenario medicine” • Systematic approach to common problems • Ask why • Teach/emphasize physical exam • Teach Bayesian theory • Acknowledge your emotions • Identify what doesn’t fit • Embrace zebras • “Slow down” • Admit mistakes Trowbridge Medical Teacher 2008

  19. Clinical Reasoning Step 2 – Identify the Curricular Milestones (142) that will help you assess a resident performing this activity Key Considerations: • What Curricular Milestones are best assessed in this setting?… in this context? • You don’t have to choose all milestones, only those that will help you to “see” competence in the trainee. • Crosswalk the twelve tips and the 142 curricular milestones.

  20. Clinical Reasoning Step 3 – Identify specific assessment methods / tools to which you can apply the chosen Curricular Milestones. Key Considerations: • What Curricular Milestones are best assessed in this setting?… in this context? • You don’t have to choose all milestones, only those that will help you to “see” competence in the trainee

  21. Methods • Portfolio – with required defense by learner • Case log • Focused narrative writing • Admit mistakes • Chart stimulated recall • Structured questioning regarding the twelve tips milestones • Bedside rounds • One minute preceptor • Time out

  22. Overall Note: • Clarity____________________________________ • Organization__________________________________ • Internal consistency____________________________________ • Documentation____________________________________

  23. The One Minute Preceptor – A Strategy For Busy Clinicians • Clinical teaching strategy • 5 microskills • Get a commitment • Probe for supporting evidence • Teach a general rule • Reinforce what was done right • Correct mistakes • “Create time for reflection” Neher, Gordon, Meyer, Stevens. J Am Board FamPract 1992; 5:419-24.

  24. “The System” • The Donobedian Framework • Schematic representation of a system • Every system has a structure and a process that processes that produce an outcome S + P = O S(the when/where) + P (the teaching and assessing) = O (“Good thinkers”)

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