Diagnostic reasoning as a medium for promoting patient safety
Introduction:Diagnostic reasoning is a key skill practised by clinicians. It is a process by which correct clinical diagnosis is reached. Learning theories offer some guidance on how this cognitive skill is best taught; what curriculum best supports it and how it is learned and used by expert and no...
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Mashhad University of Medical Sciences
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doaj-bfae4dbef3ca4ed4aa00f1ad0d58232e2020-11-24T22:04:14ZengMashhad University of Medical SciencesPatient Safety and Quality Improvement Journal2345-44822345-44902019-04-0172364010.22038/psj.2019.35489.119312437Diagnostic reasoning as a medium for promoting patient safetyLeona Lally0Geraldine Mc Carthy1Gerard Flaherty2School of Medicine, National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland.Sligo Medical Academy, Sligo University Hospital, Sligo, Ireland.School of Medicine, National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland.Introduction:Diagnostic reasoning is a key skill practised by clinicians. It is a process by which correct clinical diagnosis is reached. Learning theories offer some guidance on how this cognitive skill is best taught; what curriculum best supports it and how it is learned and used by expert and novice learners. Novice and expert learners have different needs when it comes to developing this skill. This paper aims to explore the unique role of the medical educator; exploring how they facilitate diagnostic reasoning amongst learners with an emphasis on improving patient safety.Materials and methods:The bibliography assembled for this literature review includes original articles, quantitative and qualitative papers, narrative review articles, editorials and other documents identified through PubMed, Scopus, ERIC, Australian Education Index, British Education Index and Google Scholar Database searches. Results – Medical educators employ a variety of teaching strategies including ‘thinking aloud’ techniques and hypothesis generation. There is some dispute in the literature as to which teaching strategies and which curricula best support the learning of diagnostic reasoning. The contribution of good diagnostic reasoning skills in reducing clinical error and maintaining patient safety is clear.Conclusions – It is important to continue to encourage the teaching of diagnostic reasoning with an emphasis on patient safety and its role in reducing clinical error and adverse events for patients.http://psj.mums.ac.ir/article_12437_f9a16ecb6f07af211ab5d8b44f05b6e2.pdfPatient safetyClinical errorDiagnostic reasoningClinical reasoningMedical education |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Leona Lally Geraldine Mc Carthy Gerard Flaherty |
spellingShingle |
Leona Lally Geraldine Mc Carthy Gerard Flaherty Diagnostic reasoning as a medium for promoting patient safety Patient Safety and Quality Improvement Journal Patient safety Clinical error Diagnostic reasoning Clinical reasoning Medical education |
author_facet |
Leona Lally Geraldine Mc Carthy Gerard Flaherty |
author_sort |
Leona Lally |
title |
Diagnostic reasoning as a medium for promoting patient safety |
title_short |
Diagnostic reasoning as a medium for promoting patient safety |
title_full |
Diagnostic reasoning as a medium for promoting patient safety |
title_fullStr |
Diagnostic reasoning as a medium for promoting patient safety |
title_full_unstemmed |
Diagnostic reasoning as a medium for promoting patient safety |
title_sort |
diagnostic reasoning as a medium for promoting patient safety |
publisher |
Mashhad University of Medical Sciences |
series |
Patient Safety and Quality Improvement Journal |
issn |
2345-4482 2345-4490 |
publishDate |
2019-04-01 |
description |
Introduction:Diagnostic reasoning is a key skill practised by clinicians. It is a process by which correct clinical diagnosis is reached. Learning theories offer some guidance on how this cognitive skill is best taught; what curriculum best supports it and how it is learned and used by expert and novice learners. Novice and expert learners have different needs when it comes to developing this skill. This paper aims to explore the unique role of the medical educator; exploring how they facilitate diagnostic reasoning amongst learners with an emphasis on improving patient safety.Materials and methods:The bibliography assembled for this literature review includes original articles, quantitative and qualitative papers, narrative review articles, editorials and other documents identified through PubMed, Scopus, ERIC, Australian Education Index, British Education Index and Google Scholar Database searches. Results – Medical educators employ a variety of teaching strategies including ‘thinking aloud’ techniques and hypothesis generation. There is some dispute in the literature as to which teaching strategies and which curricula best support the learning of diagnostic reasoning. The contribution of good diagnostic reasoning skills in reducing clinical error and maintaining patient safety is clear.Conclusions – It is important to continue to encourage the teaching of diagnostic reasoning with an emphasis on patient safety and its role in reducing clinical error and adverse events for patients. |
topic |
Patient safety Clinical error Diagnostic reasoning Clinical reasoning Medical education |
url |
http://psj.mums.ac.ir/article_12437_f9a16ecb6f07af211ab5d8b44f05b6e2.pdf |
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AT leonalally diagnosticreasoningasamediumforpromotingpatientsafety AT geraldinemccarthy diagnosticreasoningasamediumforpromotingpatientsafety AT gerardflaherty diagnosticreasoningasamediumforpromotingpatientsafety |
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