clinical reasoning tests mitra amini md mph associate professor of sums

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Clinical reasoning Clinical reasoning tests tests Mitra Amini Mitra Amini MD MPH MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS Associate professor of SUMS

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Page 1: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

Clinical reasoning Clinical reasoning teststests

Clinical reasoning Clinical reasoning teststests

Mitra AminiMitra AminiMD MPH MD MPH

Associate professor of SUMSAssociate professor of SUMS

Page 2: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

• Patient Management Problem (PMP)• Key Feature (KF)• Script Concordance (SC)• Clinical Reasoning Problem (CRP)• Extended Matching (EM)• Comprehensive Integrative Puzzle (CIP)• Symptom Pool (SP)

Page 3: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

Patient Management Problem

• This is a test of clinical problem solving skill which resemble clinical situation

• A PMP is usually begins with a clinical statement concerning the presenting problem of a patient with a brief history and examination data

Page 4: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

• It is structured in stages; at each stage the student is asked to make a decision about patient management, which he/she considers appropriate to the situation

Page 5: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

• Once a decision is made, further hidden information is revealed indicating the results of the proposed action

• He/she then bases his/her further decisions on the results revealed

Page 6: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS
Page 7: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

• Mrs Pamela Thompson aged 31 years, presents at your office complaining of diarrhea which has been intermittently present for the past three months. you have easy access to hospitals, specialists and laboratory facilities

Page 8: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

• Proceed to section A and select what action you would take first

• Section A:• Take detailed history• Perform detailed physical

examination

Page 9: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

• Take brief history while making rapid assessment of patient

• Perform rapid preliminary assessment

• Perform office investigation• Give emergency treatment• Call in consultant

Page 10: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

Key feature• Not all steps in resolution of a

problem are of equal importance and the testing time would be better spend by focusing on the critical aspects ,key feature

• A key feature is defined as a critical step in resolution of a problem

Page 11: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS
Page 12: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS
Page 13: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

Script Concordance• According to script theory,

clinicians mobilize networks of organized knowledge, called "scripts", to process information and progress toward solutions to clinical problems.

Page 14: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

• For example an ear, nose and throat specialist working with an outpatient suffering from vertigo is focusing on his or her knowledge of vertigo-inducing illnesses. As soon as a new patient comes into the room, complaining of a cervical mass for instance, the vertigo knowledge is "washed out" and networks of knowledge related to cervical masses are called to mind with direct questions to ask, physical exams to do or investigation/treatment options to decide on.

Page 15: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

• These knowledge networks are acquired during clinical training and refined with each clinical encounter . They are specifically adapted to the tasks clinicians commonly perform.

Page 16: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

• Health professionals progress toward solutions to clinical problems with hypotheses (or management options) and their related knowledge networks (scripts) in mind. They actively use them to constantly make judgments on the effect that each new piece of information has on the status of the hypothesis or option

Page 17: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

• Script concordance testing (SCT) is based on the principle that the multiple judgments made in these clinical reasoning processes can be probed and their concordance with those of a panel of reference experts can be measured. This provides a tool for assessing clinical reasoning

Page 18: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

• Scenarios are followed by a series of questions, presented in three parts.

• The first part ("if you were thinking of") contains a relevant diagnostic or management option.

• The second part ("and then you were to find") presents a new clinical finding, such as a physical sign, a pre-existing condition, an imaging study or a laboratory test result.

Page 19: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

• The third part ("this option would become") is a five-point Likert scale that captures examinees' decisions.

• The task for examinees is to decide what effect the new finding has on the status of the option, in direction (positive, negative or neutral) and intensity. This effect is captured with a Likert scale because script theory assumes that clinical reasoning is composed of a series of qualitative judgments

Page 20: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS
Page 21: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS
Page 22: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

Clinical Reasoning problem

• After reading a brief history, participants should choose the most possible diagnosis

• Then they should choose from patient finding the most probable and the list probable findings

Page 23: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS
Page 24: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS
Page 25: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS
Page 26: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

Extended Matching

Page 27: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS
Page 28: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

Comprehensive Integrative Puzzle

The CIP is similar to the extended matching assessment described by Case & Swanson (1993).

However, it seems to appeal more to students and teachers because of the fun in building and solving a ‘matching puzzle’ (like a cross word puzzle

Page 29: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

horizontal matching requires an ability to integrate among

disciplines and the vertical columns depictknowledge in the various disciplines.

Page 30: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS
Page 31: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

Historya)A 45-year-old man arrived at the emergency room because of chestpressure, which began three hoursbeforehand while resting. There is no history of former illnesses for the last

28 years.

Page 32: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

• (b) A 28-year-old woman, in her third month of pregnancy, arrived at the emergency room because of severe shortness of breath (dyspnea). She complains of exertional fatigue from the beginning of her pregnancy, and increasing shortness of breath during the last week.

Page 33: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

(c) A 25-year-old man complains of shortness of breath and

dizziness on exertion.Both his grandfather and elderbrother died suddenly at the age of 32 years.

(d) A 75-year-old man arrived at the emergency roombecause of 15 minutes of chest pain and sweating,which began without any prior exertion.The patienthad had a coronary by-pass operation nine years

beforehandand was asymptomatic for nine years.

Page 34: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

(e) A 32-year-old woman, with known congenital heartdefect, was hospitalized with a three-week history offever, malaise, night sweats and increasing shortness ofbreath.

(f ) A 40-year-old woman, suffering for the last three weeks

from flu-like symptoms, complains of continuous anteriorchest pain during the last week.The pain is aggravatedby inspiration, change of posture or swallowing

Page 35: Clinical reasoning tests Mitra Amini MD MPH Associate professor of SUMS

Symptom pool

• Forward reasoning

• Backward reasoning

• Principle of parsimony