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Improving Resident Feedback on Diagnostic Reasoning after Handovers: The LOOP Project

Authors :
Juan N. Lessing
Grant Turner
L. Barry Seltz
Catherine Y. Chia
Andrew P.J. Olson
Julie Schaefer
Brittany Wheeler
Kathleen P. Lane
David Wooldridge
Benji K Mathews
Julia Limes
Source :
Journal of hospital medicine. 14(10)
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Appropriate calibration of clinical reasoning is critical to becoming a competent physician. Lack of follow-up after transitions of care can present a barrier to calibration. This study aimed to implement structured feedback about clinical reasoning for residents performing overnight admissions, measure the frequency of diagnostic changes, and determine how feedback impacts learners’ self-efficacy. Trainees shared feedback via a structured form within their electronic health record’s secure messaging system. Forms were analyzed for diagnostic changes. Surveys evaluated comfort with sharing feedback, self-efficacy in identifying and mitigating cognitive biases’ negative effects, and perceived educational value of night admissions—all of which improved after implementation. Analysis of 544 forms revealed a 43.7% diagnostic change rate spanning the transition from night-shift to day-shift providers; of the changes made, 29% (12.7% of cases overall) were major changes. This study suggests that structured feedback on clinical reasoning for overnight admissions is a promising approach to improve residents’ diagnostic calibration, particularly given how often diagnostic changes occur.

Details

ISSN :
15535606
Volume :
14
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of hospital medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....eede22a83fa8ec69436753074ec39a82