In Support of Meaningful Assessment and Feedback: A Study of Clinical Reasoning Tasks Used in Ambulatory Case Reviews
Jacqueline M. I. Torti, Susan Humphrey Murto, Kristen A. Bishop, Azin Ahrari, Mark Goldszmidt

TL;DR
This study explores how clinical reasoning tasks are handled by medical residents in rheumatology clinics and how these tasks relate to clinical expertise.
Contribution
The study identifies common clinical reasoning tasks in ambulatory settings and suggests a shared language could improve resident feedback and training.
Findings
New consultations focus on diagnosis and management, while follow-ups emphasize treatment response and prognosis.
Strong presentations showed selectivity in addressing patient-specific tasks.
A shared language for reasoning tasks could enhance competency-based training and feedback.
Abstract
Assessing clinical reasoning and offering meaningful feedback to residents through workplace-based assessments remains challenging. Part of this challenge lies not only in articulating how well residents perform clinical tasks, but also in having a shared language to describe the underlying reasoning that supports those tasks. This study aimed to explore clinical reasoning tasks in an ambulatory setting and their relationship to clinical expertise. This single-site instrumental case study explored clinical reasoning of junior and senior residents in new and follow-up rheumatology cases. Case reviews, including resident, attending, and patient interactions were audio-recorded and transcribed. Data analysis combined template and content analysis to explore reasoning. Coding was iterative, with regular consensus meetings among researchers. Findings were confirmed through a focus group…
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Taxonomy
TopicsClinical Reasoning and Diagnostic Skills · Innovations in Medical Education · Patient-Provider Communication in Healthcare
