Differences
in Diagnostic Reasoning of Expert and Novice Residents: Underlying Reasons and
Suggestions for Improvements
Farhat
Fatima
College
of Medicine, Qatar University, Qatar
Correspondence to: Dr. Farhat Fatima,
Email: farhatkashif@gmail.com, ORCID : 0000-0002-8532-5714
https://doi.org/10.36570/jduhs.2020.1.772
ABSTRACT
With
concerns related to patient safety gaining global precedence, diagnostic errors
are speculated as an important cause of harm to the patients.Strong diagnostic
skills indeed develop on grounds of sound knowledge and experience, however an
understanding of the cognitive processes underlying diagnosis, principles of
expertise development and a commitment to lifelong learning add to a clinician
s diagnostic reasoning paradigm. An exploration into the differences in
diagnostic reasoning among expert and novice residents can yield practical
insights into optimizing the diagnostic thought process. Awareness of the possible underlying
factors leading to expertise in diagnostic reasoning, along with a repertoire
of strategies to improve can be a starting point for novice residents towards
developing this crucially important skill.
BACKGROUND
Transforming
data obtained through clinical encounters into diagnoses is one of the most
fundamental, yet error prone step during the patient care process and thus warrants
due consideration as a focus of potential improvement from the very early
stages. Errors may occur in the diagnostic process anywhere from the point of
patient s initial assessment to performance and interpretation of diagnostic
tests, and even during follow-up and patient referral. With concerns
related to patient safety gaining global precedence, diagnostic errors are
speculated as an important cause of harm to the patients.1
The
burden of diagnostic errors is significant to the point that approximately 5%
of adults who attended outpatient clinics endured diagnostic errors on an
annual basis. Above 50% of these errors had detrimental consequences. This data
reflects situation in a developed country and an even higher percentage of
diagnostic errors is expected for developing countries, as access to resources
and specialists is further limited there.1 Considering this,
explicit attempts by residents to improve their diagnostic accuracy can in the
end increase patient safety standards, more so in a country where resources are
scarce.
Concept
of illness scripts
A
concept termed script introduced earlier by researches in cognitive psychology
was used to explain how knowledge structure gets stored in the mind. This
concept is based on the understanding that as soon as a medical student is
exposed to clinical situations, mental scripts start getting constructed in his
mind. Later when confronted with similarclinical scenarios such scripts are
recovered. The diagnostic process thus depends on the quality and quantity of
such mental scripts acquired by a medical student throughout the clinical
exposure and hence have a directlinear relationship with expertise. With
novices,even the type of task at hand can influence the activation of a
different script, a phenomenon known as scattered knowledge. This means that
all the knowledge related to diagnosing a clinical encounter is stored in the
mind of a novice in a scattered manner i.e. they are saved separately from each
other in a non-integrated manner and are thus not recovered simultaneously when
confronted with clinical situations. Experts on the other hand have rich
scripts wherein knowledge related to each clinical condition is integrated
strongly and retrieved simultaneously when needed and thus is not affected by
the type of task at hand.4In addition to the cognitive basis of
diagnostic reasoning discussed above, there are additional factors like
context, affect and institutional factors which were earlier ignored, but are
now gaining importance in relevance to diagnostic reasoning.5
Diagnostic
reasoning models
Diagnosis
is seen as a fundamental component of a physician s task and thus its teaching
and learning hold vital importance for medical education systems. However, the
practical implications of teaching and assessing it are by no means straight
forward. Attempts have been made to enhance knowledge on the subject and come
up with different models that highlight factors contributing to diagnostic
reasoning. Few of these models are hypothetic-deductive model, pattern
recognition, a dual process diagnostic reasoning model, pathway for clinical
reasoning, an integrative model of clinical reasoning and model of diagnostic
reasoning strategies in primary care. The hypothetic-deductive model focuses on
hypothesis generation as an initial step in the diagnostic process and hence
talks about the analytical route to reasoning only. The next model i.e. the
pattern recognition on the other hand only considered the rapid non-analytical
mode employed by experts. Both analytical and non-analytical reasoning as well
as their interplay is explained by the dual process model, wherein repeated
attempts at analytical reasoning support the creation of knowledge structures,
thus improving the reasoning related to that problem to expert levels (i.e. non
analytical).
The
next two models, pathway for clinical reasoning and the integrative model of
clinical reasoning brought forward the role of environmental and contextual
factors while hypothesis is being developed. The last model, Model of
diagnostic strategies proposed stages for clinical reasoning and strategies of
both analytical and non-analytical mode.6
Possible reasons for
differences in diagnostic reasoning of experts and novice
Reasons
for difference in performance between an expert and a novice resident can be
appreciated by considering in detail why experts outperform in their specific
domains. Experts in a particular domain perform better than novices for a
variety of reasons as discussed. They possess relevant background knowledge
that enables them to attend to presenting problem more efficiently by
activating the relevant content schemata, utilize important information in a
timely manner and assimilate new information with much less effort.7,8,11,12
In the course of growth towards expertise, knowledge expands and is restructured
from declarative, elaboratecausal networks to encapsulated simplified causal
models. This aids in interrelating signs and symptoms following exposure to
patient scenarios. Extensive practice later leads to the formation of illness
scripts that contain a rich database of knowledge for contextual or enabling
conditions. This characterizes advanced levels of expertise followed by
exemplars derived from experience.9,19 Because of this assimilation
of biomedical and clinical knowledge experts don t need to revert back to basic
science concepts unless a difficult or ambiguous situation is encountered
wherethey use it better than novices.10
Experts
dedicate more time to problem identification, a very crucial stage in the
problem-solving process. Careful reflection on the nature of a problem and
considering a number of solutions before deciding on a final solution are
decisive to successful problem solving.11
Experts
can identify and focus on relevant information resulting in considerable
reduction of problem space, thus enabling the utilization of resources to
understanding the relationship between relevant pieces of information.11The
way problems are categorized also differs between experts, who tend to use deep
structure principles based on their background knowledge and experience, and
novices who tend to rely on surface structure features.11,13
After
years of experience in a specific domain, experts have a rich bank of algorithms
and heuristics to use when faced with a problem. More importantly they are
skilled in choosing the right one for the presenting problem.11,13This
hard-earned clinical experience is what defines the real expert and enables him
to recognize and deal with varied patient presentations.14
According
to psychological literature heuristics and rules of thumb are efficient mental
strategies which may help clinicians cope with uncertain situations and
overcome the limitations of time and data. They serve as powerful tools to cope
up with the diagnostic challenges and usually lead to accurate decisions,
though at the cost of predictable error reflecting the inherent biases
associated with them.15,16
Experts
are more likely to use means-ends analysis in contrast to trial and error used
by novices, wherein they break problems into sub goals and work towards the
desired ending.11,13 They plan ahead of time and display a
coordinated approach to the entire problem-solving sequence.11,13
Experts
choose, use, shift, evaluate and discard strategies and reach workable
solutions more efficiently than novices. This is because of the great deal of
procedural knowledge they have gained from experience.11-13
They
also have built repertories of automated cognitive processes allowing them to
perform complex cognitive taskssmoothly, quickly and without undue attention to
details.11 Moreover experts judge the difficulty of problems more
accurately than novices and ask more appropriate questions at all stages of the
problem-solving process.11,13
Research
also suggests individual cognitive differencessuch as working memory capacity
in predicting expert performance, after controlling the effects of deliberate
practice. Though the extent to which it occurs may be influenced by the nature
of the task under study and the cognitive processes used by experts for that
particular task. The importance of working memory capacity is higher for
non-routine or functionally complex tasks.17
Thus,
the senior resident is faster, more competent and more insightful because he
has accumulated extensive domain specific knowledge.17,18 This along
with the reasons discussed above make him a strategic and efficient problem
solver.11-14,18,19
Suggestions for
improvement
Based
on the above discussion the following may aid the junior residents in becoming
more adept and efficient professionals. They should try to acquire as much
expert knowledge as quickly as possible, as this is the most important factor
in achieving expertise and there is no substitute for it.7-9,11,17,18
They
should also ask an expert for help whenever it is difficult to comprehend a
particular problem and try to get an insight into which strategy the expert is
using to solve such problems.11,19
An
enhanced understanding of the basic processes of problem solving does help in
achieving expertise and can turn a person into a better problem
solver.Novicesneed to be trained to employ a reflective approach to problem
solving. Studies have shown that if problem solving training is coupled with metacognitive
training or other kinds of instruction, such as questioning it further enhances
the problem-solving abilities of the student. Only a self-directed, strategic,
reflective learner can become a flexible, effective problem solver.11They
can also reflect and elaborate upon the clinical casesencountered, preferably
with a small group of peers and coached by a senior. This can help the novice
learner better comprehend where and why he was wrong and how can he improve in
future.9,11Discussing errors with colleagues facilitates effective
learning and accountability as identified in studies by Wu et al and supported
by later studies also.20
They
can also learn expert strategies and try to mimic them but at the same time
taking utmost caution to use them at the right time and place.11Awareness
has to be developed by providing detailed and thorough characterization of
known cognitive biases. Provide multiple clinical examples on the constructive
as well as detrimental effects of cognitive biases on the diagnostic process.
This will help them reflect on the specific effects of heuristics on clinical
decisions.15,16,24
Novice
residents must dedicate more time to problem discovery and identification when
confronted with a patient scenario because this is one area where experts spend
significant time before solving a problem and it does significantly improve
outcomes.11Novices may find a structured search useful, while
pattern recognition skills are under development e.g. aiding clinical decision
making by using the search-inference framework, by the time a sizeable
repertoire of illness scripts is developed.21
CONCLUSION
An awareness of the possible underlying
factors leading to expertise in diagnostic reasoning, along with a repertoire
of strategies to improve can be a starting point for novice residents towards
developing this crucially important skill. To further complement the effective
development of diagnostic reasoning among medical students, acurriculum with
less of memorization and more of exploration of speculative ideas within safe
limits, along with early introduction to typical clinical cases is recommended.22
Further for teaching and assessing reasoning skills focus should be on the
process through which a plausible diagnosis is arrived at, rather than reaching
a correct one in the first attempt.23
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