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Diagnostic reasoning across the medical education continuum

  • C. Scott Smithb, c(Author)
    ,
  • William Hillb(Author)
    ,
  • Chris Francovicha, b(Author)
    ,
  • Magdalena Morrisb, e(Author)
    ,
  • Bruce Robbinsd(Author)
    ,
  • Lynne Robinsc(Author)
  • ,
  • bBoise VA Medical Center
    ,
  • cUniversity of Washington
    ,
  • dBoise State University
    ,
  • eEagle Gate College
    ,
  • fVA Medical Center
Research Output: Contribution to journal Article Peer-review

Open access

Abstract

We aimed to study linguistic and non-linguistic elements of diagnostic reasoning across the continuum of medical education. We performed semi-structured interviews of premedical students, first year medical students, third year medical students, second year internal medicine residents, and experienced faculty (ten each) as they diagnosed three common causes of dyspnea. A second observer recorded emotional tone. All interviews were digitally recorded and blinded transcripts were created. Propositional analysis and concept mapping were performed. Grounded theory was used to identify salient categories and transcripts were scored with these categories. Transcripts were then unblinded. Systematic differences in propositional structure, number of concept connections, distribution of grounded theory categories, episodic and semantic memories, and emotional tone were identified. Summary concept maps were created and grounded theory concepts were explored for each learning level. We identified three major findings: (1) The “apprentice effect” in novices (high stress and low narrative competence); (2) logistic concept growth in intermediates; and (3) a cognitive state transition (between analytical and intuitive approaches) in experts. These findings warrant further study and comparison.

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