Competency | Suggested Questions |
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I. Individual Competency: Demonstrate clinical reasoning to arrive at a justifiable diagnosis (an explanation for a health-related condition) | |
I-1. Accurately and efficiently collect key clinical findings needed to inform diagnostic hypotheses. |
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I-2. Formulate, or contribute to, an accurate problem representation expressed in a concise summary statement that includes essential epidemiological, clinical, and psychosocial information. |
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I-3. Produce, or contribute to, a correctly prioritized, relevant differential diagnosis, including can’t-miss diagnoses. |
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I-4. Explain and justify the prioritization of the differential diagnosis by comparing and contrasting the patient’s findings and test results with accurate knowledge about prototypical or characteristic disease manifestations and atypical presentations, and considering pathophysiology, disease likelihood, and clinical experience. |
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I-5. Use decision support tools, including point-of-care resources, checklists, consultation, and second opinions to improve diagnostic accuracy and timeliness. |
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I-6. Use reflection, surveillance, and critical thinking to improve diagnostic performance and mitigate detrimental cognitive bias throughout the clinical encounter. |
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Source: Society to Improve Diagnosis in Medicine. Competencies & Learning Objectives: Consensus Curriculum on Diagnosis. https://www.improvediagnosis.org/consensuscurriculum-competencies/. Accessed September 2, 2022.
Competency | Suggested Questions |
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T. Team-Based Competency: Partner effectively as part of an interprofessional diagnostic team. Communicate effectively and solicit information from all members of the team (including the patient and family) to create a shared mental model of a patient’s illness and the plan for diagnostic evaluation. | |
T-1. Engage and collaborate with patients and families, in accordance with their values and preferences when making a plan for diagnostic evaluation. |
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T-2. Collaborate with other healthcare professionals (including nurses, physicians, physician assistants, radiologists, laboratory professionals, pharmacists, social workers, physical therapists, medical librarians, and others) and communicate effectively throughout the diagnostic process. Acknowledge and challenge authority gradients, especially between clinicians and patients/families, constructively. |
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T-3. Apply effective strategies at transitions of care to facilitate accurate and sufficient information transfer about the diagnosis, including any pending workup and areas of uncertainty. Close the loop on test result communication and clarify expectations with the team for test result followup. |
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Competency | Suggested Questions |
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S. System-Related Competency: Identify and understand the systems factors that facilitate and contribute to timely, accurate diagnoses and error avoidance. | |
S-1. Discuss how human factors contribute to diagnostic safety and error by identifying how the work environment influences human performance. Take steps to mitigate common systems factors that detract from diagnostic quality and safety. |
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S-2. Advance a culture of diagnostic safety that encourages open dialogue and continuous learning from analysis and discussion of excellent diagnostic performance, near-misses, and errors. |
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S-3. Disclose diagnostic errors and missed opportunities transparently and in a timely manner to patients, families, team members, supervisors, and appropriate quality and risk management staff. |
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