A Systematic Approach to the Interpretation of the Knee Radiograph to Avoid Common Diagnostic Errors

2019 ◽  
Vol 42 (15) ◽  
pp. 8
2020 ◽  
Vol 31 (5) ◽  
pp. 194-198
Author(s):  
Paul Silverston

COVID-19 has created a wave of uncertainty for nurses and healthcare practitioners, with new information on the virus being released constantly. Paul Silverston discusses the assessment of patients with symptoms of COVID-19 and how to reduce the risk of misdiagnosis Errors in diagnosis are relatively common in primary care which often result in serious harm to patients. The majority of these errors are preventable. This article describes a diagnostic error checklist, SAFER PRACTICES, which can be used to help clinicians prepare themselves for consulting in patients with suspected or confirmed COVID-19 disease so that they come to the consultation with the correct medical knowledge, clinical assessment plan and diagnostic reasoning required to reduce the risk of diagnostic error. It can also be used during the consultation to deliver a systematic approach to the prevention and detection of diagnostic errors.


2017 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 86-94 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lindsay Heggie ◽  
Lesly Wade-Woolley

Students with persistent reading difficulties are often especially challenged by multisyllabic words; they tend to have neither a systematic approach for reading these words nor the confidence to persevere (Archer, Gleason, & Vachon, 2003; Carlisle & Katz, 2006; Moats, 1998). This challenge is magnified by the fact that the vast majority of English words are multisyllabic and constitute an increasingly large proportion of the words in elementary school texts beginning as early as grade 3 (Hiebert, Martin, & Menon, 2005; Kerns et al., 2016). Multisyllabic words are more difficult to read simply because they are long, posing challenges for working memory capacity. In addition, syllable boundaries, word stress, vowel pronunciation ambiguities, less predictable grapheme-phoneme correspondences, and morphological complexity all contribute to long words' difficulty. Research suggests that explicit instruction in both syllabification and morphological knowledge improve poor readers' multisyllabic word reading accuracy; several examples of instructional programs involving one or both of these elements are provided.


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