Using the case method to explore characteristics of the clinical reasoning process among ambulance nurse students and professionals

2019 ◽  
Vol 35 ◽  
pp. 48-54 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonas Wihlborg ◽  
Gudrun Edgren ◽  
Anders Johansson ◽  
Bengt Sivberg ◽  
Christina Gummesson
protocols.io ◽  
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rob A ◽  
Hans Elvers ◽  
Emiel van ◽  
Geert Rutten ◽  
Wendy Scholten ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 40 (7) ◽  
pp. 736-742
Author(s):  
Inga Hege ◽  
Anita Dietl ◽  
Jan Kiesewetter ◽  
Jörg Schelling ◽  
Isabel Kiesewetter

2020 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 686-693
Author(s):  
Heru Suwardianto ◽  
Vitaria Wahyu Astuti

The results showed that most respondents had good critical nursing competency scores including primary assessment: airway assessment (53.8%); breathing assessment  (56.4%); Circulation assessment (61.5%); Disability assessment (56.4%); and Exposure assessment (59%), professionalism (56.4%), critical nursing care competencies (79.5%), Clinical reasoning process (71.8%), Patient safety (61.5%) and critical care exam score (46.2%). The result of statistical test with Pearson test obtained that the primary assessment: airway assessment (ρ = 0.038); circulation assessment (ρ = 0.029); Exposure assessment (ρ = 0.023), competence of critical nursing care (ρ = 0.049), clinical reasoning process (ρ = 0.028) and patient safety (ρ = 0.001) have a significant relationship to the critical care exam score. The implementation of learning methods for journal sharing of critical care has a positive impact on competencies and results in good student competencies.   


2018 ◽  
Vol 42 (3) ◽  
pp. 194-200
Author(s):  
Djon Machado Lopes ◽  
Gustavo Henrique Bregagnollo ◽  
Bruna Morais Barbosa ◽  
Ana Maria Nunes de Faria Stamm

ABSTRACT Introduction Research in the field of medical reasoning has shed light on the reasoning process used by medical students. The strategies in this process are related to the analytical [hypothetical-deductive (HD)] and nonanalytic [scheme-inductive) (SI)] systems, and pattern recognition (PR)]. Objective To explore the clinical reasoning process of students from the fifth year of medical school at the end of the clinical cycle of medical internship, and to identify the strategies used in preparing diagnostic hypotheses, knowledge organization and content. Method Qualitative research conducted in 2014 at a Brazilian public university with medical interns. Following Stamm’s method, a case in internal medicine (IM) was built based on the theory of prototypes (Group 1 = 47 interns), in which the interns listed, according to their own perceptions, the signs, symptoms, syndromes, and diseases typical of internal medicine. This case was used for evaluating the clinical reasoning process of Group 2 (30 students = simple random sample) obtained with the “think aloud” process. The verbalizations were transcribed and evaluated by Bardin’s thematic analysis. The content analysis were approved by two experts at the beginning and at the end of the analysis process. Results The interns developed 164 primary and secondary hypotheses when solving the case. The SI strategy prevailed with 48.8%, followed by PR (35.4%), HD (12.2%), and mixed (1.8 % each: SI + HD and HD + PR). The students built 146 distinct semantic axes, resulting in an average of 4.8/participant. During the analysis, 438 interpretation processes were executed (average of 14.6/participant), and 124 combination processes (average of 4.1/participant). Conclusions The nonanalytic strategies prevailed with the PR being the most used in the development of primary hypotheses (46.8%) and the SI in secondary hypotheses (93%). The interns showed a strong semantic network and did three and a half times more interpretation than combination processes, reflecting less deep organization and content of knowledge when compared with experienced physicians.


2017 ◽  
Vol 44 (1) ◽  
pp. 40-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Birgitte Ahlsen ◽  
Anne Marit Mengshoel ◽  
Hilde Bondevik ◽  
Eivind Engebretsen

This article investigates the clinical reasoning process of physiotherapists working with patients with chronic muscle pain. The article demonstrates how physiotherapists work with clues and weigh up different plots as they seek to build consistent stories about their patient’s illness. The material consists of interviews with 10 Norwegian physiotherapists performed after the first clinical encounter with a patient. Using a narrative approach and Lonergan’s theory of interpretation, the study highlights how, like detectives, the therapists work with clues by asking a number of interpretive questions of their data. They interrogate what they have observed and heard during the first session, they also question how the patient’s story was told, including the contextual and relation aspects of clue production, and they ask why the patient’s story was told to them in this particular way at this particular time. The article shows how the therapists configure clues into various plots on the basis of their experience of working with similar cases and how their detective work is pushed forward by uncertainty and persistent questioning of the data.


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