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Clinical Case Processing: A Diagnostic Versus a Management Focus Publisher Pubmed



Monajemi A1, 4 ; Rikers RMJP2 ; Schmidt HG3
Authors
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Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. Applied Physiology Research Centre, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran
  2. 2. Department of Psychology, Faculty of Social Sciences, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, Netherlands
  3. 3. Department of Psychology, Erasmus University, Rotterdam, Netherlands
  4. 4. Applied Physiology Research Centre, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Hezar Jarib Avenue, Iran

Source: Medical Education Published:2007


Abstract

Context: Most studies on medical expertise research have focused on diagnostic performance, whereas patient management has been largely ignored. According to knowledge encapsulation theory, applying encapsulated knowledge is a characteristic of expert doctors' diagnostic reasoning, but it is unclear whether or not encapsulated knowledge also plays a prominent role when processing a clinical case with a management focus. Methods: The participants were 40 medical students (20 in Year 4 and 20 in Year 6) and 20 expert doctors (internists). Participants were asked to study the cases with either a diagnostic (Dx) or a management (Mx) focus. Subsequently, participants were asked to write down what they remembered from the case. Results: In both conditions, experts recalled fewer propositions and used more high-level inferences than medical students. Furthermore, they processed the cases faster and more accurately than medical students, but no significant difference between Mx and Dx conditions was found. Year 4 students also showed no significant differences in recall and processing speed between conditions. By contrast, Year 6 students recalled more in a Dx than in an Mx condition, but there was no significant difference in processing speed between conditions. Conclusions: In both conditions, findings indicate that the experts' and Year 4 students' performance was not affected by processing focus. The fact that only Year 6 students were affected by processing focus might be explained by the assumption that their diagnostic knowledge and management knowledge are not fully integrated yet, a process that has already taken place in the expert's knowledge structure. © 2007 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.