THE INFLUENCE OF EXPERIENCE WITH A SET OF SIMULATED PATIENTS ON DIAGNOSIS OF SIMULATED PATIENTS NOT PREVIOUSLY DIAGNOSED

Citation
Bj. Norton et Mj. Strube, THE INFLUENCE OF EXPERIENCE WITH A SET OF SIMULATED PATIENTS ON DIAGNOSIS OF SIMULATED PATIENTS NOT PREVIOUSLY DIAGNOSED, Physical therapy, 78(4), 1998, pp. 375-385
Citations number
22
Categorie Soggetti
Orthopedics,Rehabilitation
Journal title
ISSN journal
00319023
Volume
78
Issue
4
Year of publication
1998
Pages
375 - 385
Database
ISI
SICI code
0031-9023(1998)78:4<375:TIOEWA>2.0.ZU;2-M
Abstract
Background and Purpose. Diagnoses, to be useful, should be accurate. T he purpose of this study using fictitious patients and student judges was to test the theory that diagnostic errors would occur when student s saw simulated patients who were similar to previously seen simulated patients. Subjects. Sixty physical therapist (PT) students and 60 non physical therapist (NPT) students were studied. Subjects were assigned randomly to one of three groups. Methods. instructions to the three g roups differed in terms of rules provided for diagnoses and instructio ns to remember the patients. Students first diagnosed the same eight f ictitious patients five times. The students then diagnosed eight new p atients with similar characteristics interspersed with the original ei ght patients. Half of the new patients had a diagnosis different from that of the most similar old patient. Results. Students who were given a rule for diagnosis made fewer errors than students who were not giv en a rule. Students in the PT group took longer but made fewer errors on the critical opposite-diagnosis new cases than did students in the NPT group. Conclusion and Discussion. The results do not provide suppo rt for the theory that diagnostic errors would occur when students saw patients who were similar to previously seen patients. Students in th e PT group appeared to emphasize accuracy at the expense of speed in m aking their diagnoses. Given the nature of the simulated patient infor mation and the mode of presentation used in the experiment, however, t he conclusion that therapists in actual practice do not make errors be cause of the similarity between new and previously seen patients is no t yet warranted.