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I Don't Have a Diagnosis for You: Preparing Medical Students to Communicate Diagnostic Uncertainty in the Emergency Department

Authors :
Maria Poluch
Jordan Feingold-Link
Nethra Ankam
Jared Kilpatrick
Kenzie Cameron
Shruti Chandra
Amanda Doty
Matthew Klein
Danielle McCarthy
Kristin Rising
David Salzman
Deborah Ziring
Dimitrios Papanagnou
Source :
MedEdPORTAL, Vol 18 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Association of American Medical Colleges, 2022.

Abstract

Introduction Diagnostic uncertainty abounds in medicine, and communication of that uncertainty is critical to the delivery of high-quality patient care. While there has been training in communicating diagnostic uncertainty directed towards residents, a gap remains in preparing medical students to understand and communicate diagnostic uncertainty. We developed a session to introduce medical students to diagnostic uncertainty and to practice communicating uncertainty using a checklist during role-play patient conversations. Methods This virtual session was conducted for third-year medical students at the conclusion of their core clerkships. It consisted of prework, didactic lecture, peer role-play, and debriefing. The prework included reflection prompts and an interactive online module. The role-play featured a patient complaining of abdominal pain being discharged from the emergency department without a confirmed diagnosis. Students participated in the role of patient, provider, or observer. Results Data from an anonymous postsession survey (76% response rate; 202 of 265 students) indicated that most students (82%; 152 of 185) felt more comfortable communicating diagnostic uncertainty after the session. A majority (83%; 166 of 201) indicated the session was useful, and most (81%; 149 of 184) indicated it should be included in the curriculum. Discussion This virtual session requires few facilitators; has peer role-play, eliminating the need for standardized patients; and is adaptable for in-person teaching. As its goal was to introduce an approach to communicating diagnostic uncertainty, not achieve mastery, students were not individually assessed for proficiency using the Uncertainty Communication Checklist. Students felt the session intervention was valuable.

Details

ISSN :
23748265
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
MedEdPORTAL
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....75db0d3fa6ae79525574f233d4b9184b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11218