11/ These studies surveyed primary teams re: consult preferences.
There were some differences between surgical & non-surgical teams, but most agreed that notes should:
β Be concise
β Describe decision-making rationale
β Indicate importance & urgency of recs
12/ Importantly, most did NOT care about:
π Limiting # of recommendations
π Including references
13/ Based on this data, we should probably teach 3 important aspects of the data synthesis (i.e., "assessment & recommendations"):
1β£ Synthesis - description of patient's problem with ddx
2β£ Recommendations - clear, concise, specific
3β£ Structure - well-organized, easy-to-read
14/ So how can we teach our learners, esp those new to a consult team, how to write effective notes?
I've summarized some strategies in the table below.
Two keys to doing this effectively:
ποΈ Providing explicit guidance
ποΈ Practicing what we π£οΈ
15/ Next week @VarunPhadke2 will continue this series on "Teaching Consultant Skills" with βDealing with Conflictβ ...
1/ Your team just saw a patient with syphilis, and you're ready to teach, but:
Resident #1: on week 2 of their rotation
π Has already seen 2 patients w/ syphilis
Resident #2: started today
π Hasn't seen a single patient with syphilis
What should you do now?
2/ Unfortunately, learners on our team may miss teaching that occurs during the rotation for multiple reasons.
3/ As @VarunPhadke2 previously pointed out, all learners on the team are usually not present all day, every day for the entire time we are on clinical services.
You share details about a new consult & schedule β±οΈ to meet in the afternoon to staff.
βοΈ
5 minutes into their presentation you realize, "Oh no. I'm going to have to redo this consult, aren't I?"
2/ Learners on consult teams must tackle unfamiliar and complex questions, often with less time to evaluate a patient and develop a plan than on primary services.
3/ This @AcadMedJournal paper by @s_brond describes factors that contribute to cognitive load on consults.
Β pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34348389/
Β
Although this article focuses on the experiences of fellows, other learners likely struggle with some of these areas as well.