3/ Teaching & assessing clinical decision-making skills is HARD.
Without a framework for the cognitive processes involved, it can be challenging to isolate the specific skills a learner needs to work on.
This leads to unhelpful feedback like "lacks confidence" (which = 🤷).
4/ Fortunately, there's been an explosion of helpful publications & other resources over the past few years w/ specific tips on teaching management reasoning.
I’ve highlighted a few here.
I have drawn on these & many others to craft this thread, & added some of my own pearls.
5/ For this 🧵 I'll be discussing just three skills that I’ve extracted from this framework of management reasoning (one that is still being refined):
1⃣ Naming a problem to be solved
2⃣ Identifying management options
3⃣ Navigating decision thresholds
13/ Now go back to tweet #11 in this 🧵. Does it remind you of anything? Yes, it’s a schema!
This was entirely deliberate.
I’ve found it can be helpful to teach management scripts on-the-fly using the same strategies I use to build diagnostic schemas on-the-fly!
Check it out!
14/ 3⃣ “Navigating decision thresholds"
This is my favorite part of management reasoning to teach about.
And it's particularly important on consult services where many management decisions are shaped by the varying thresholds of the consultant, primary team, patient, & system.
15/ A decision threshold is the point at which a clinician perceives they have enough info to take an action (ex perform a test, start Rx).
How high/low their threshold is for taking that action depends on many factors, which may be internal/external to the action or clinician.
16/ How can we elicit the [usually implicit] thresholds that are guiding a learner's decision-making?
Three strategies I use routinely:
*⃣ Progressive problem-solving (h/t to @Gurpreet2015)
*⃣ The "spectrum of anxiety"
*⃣ "Shoot down my crazy idea"
17/ The unifying concept underlying all three of these approaches is to provide learners w/ hypothetical scenarios which they can use to "benchmark" their decision-making.
Ideally such “reps” occur organically through clinical exposure.
But they don’t. So we need to improvise.
18/ How can we make learners more aware of the factors that influence decision-making?
By thinking through those factors systematically (see Table).
📌 Dissected three elements of the management reasoning process w/ a focus on consultants
📌 Described tactics to “surface” the cognitive processes underlying learners’ decision-making
📌 Identified teaching strategies to build those skills
20/ Next week @JenniferSpicer4 will pick up a new series on “Teaching the Primary Team” focusing on “The Why”.
Them: “We want you on board because ____ is 'refusing' to do this procedure but ____ says it's needed. You're the tiebreaker.”
You: [sigh] “OK.”
⌛️
Patient: “Ah! ____ said YOU'RE the one holding up my discharge!”
You: 🙄
Feeling triggered yet?
This week:
2/ Conflict is inevitable when working within a system.
What do I mean when I say “conflict”? 🤔 For the purposes of this 🧵 let me paraphrase a huge body of literature w/ the following definition:
Conflict is “disagreement” that causes (or has the potential to cause) “harm”.
3/ Let's unpack this a bit more w/ a focus on conflict in consultative care.
"Disagreement" is a broad term.
It can stem from...
↪️ real OR perceived differences in opinion
↪️ about diagnosis OR management
↪️ between the primary team & the consultant OR between consultants
2/ If you’re a clinical teacher in a subspecialty & wanted to incorporate pearls from #TweetorialTuesday, you've probably said to yourself (like I did):
WHEN? My days have ZERO predictability
WHAT? My learners are all at a VERY different place
WHO? My team seems to change QOD
3/ In this series @JenniferSpicer4 and I will share strategies for YOU, focusing on teaching as a [sub]specialist.
Our scope:
🌟 Teaching as an inpatient CONSULTANT
🌟 Teaching the CONSULT team (team hoping to provide help)
🌟 Teaching the PRIMARY team (team asking for help)