VIDEO

  1. Clinical Problem Solving

  2. clinical problem solving part1 Neuroanatomy chapter #1 @A.Medicalknowledge

  3. clinical problem solving Neuroanatomy part 2. chapter #1 @A.Medicalknowledge

COMMENTS

  1. The Clinical Problem Solvers

    The Clinical Problem Solvers Democratizing clinical reasoning education Podcast Morning Report RLR CPSolvers Frameworks - Scripts Get Involved!

  2. Clinical problem solving and diagnostic decision making: selective

    This is the fourth in a series of five articles This article reviews our current understanding of the cognitive processes involved in diagnostic reasoning in clinical medicine. It describes and analyses the psychological processes employed in identifying and solving diagnostic problems and reviews errors and pitfalls in diagnostic reasoning in the light of two particularly influential ...

  3. Introduction

    This chapter introduces the concept of clinical reasoning. It attempts to define what clinical reasoning is and what its features are. Solving clinical problems involves the ability to reason about causality of pathological processes, requiring knowledge of anatomy and the working and pathology of organ systems, and it requires the ability to compare patient problems as patterns with instances ...

  4. Clinical Problem Analysis (CPA): A Systematic Approach to Te ...

    Clinical problem analysis has a number of advantages compared with other methods of solving clinical problems. First, there are some general advantages: CPA can be applied to clinical problems at any level of complexity and to incomplete cases (even a single activating finding may be subjected to analysis).

  5. Evidence base of clinical diagnosis: Clinical problem solving and

    Pattern recognition or categorisation. Expertise in problem solving varies greatly between individual clinicians and is highly dependent on the clinician's mastery of the particular domain. 9 This finding challenges the hypothetico-deductive model of clinical reasoning, since both successful and unsuccessful diagnosticians use hypothesis testing. It appears that diagnostic accuracy does not ...

  6. Clinical Reasoning: Defining It, Teaching It, Assessing It, Studying It

    The descriptive perspective has its roots in cognitive psychology and began as a special case of general problem-solving studies. It focuses on clinical reasoning as a domain in which the problems are complex and there is a clear role for expertise. The critical role of knowledge distinguishes medicine from many other domains of problem-solving ...

  7. Inside and Out

    Clinical Problem-Solving from The New England Journal of Medicine — Inside and Out. ... confirming the overall clinical impression of neurofibromatosis . Table 1.

  8. How to Write a Clinical Problem Solving Manuscript

    A clinical problem solving (CPS) exercise highlights the process by which an experienced clinician approaches a diagnostic puzzle. It is constructed in a manner that emphasizes thought process and reasoning as the case unfolds. A CPS manuscript is a variation on the traditional case report which allows the authors to explore a clinical dilemma ...

  9. Clinical problem-solving in nursing: insights from the literature

    Abstract. This paper reviews the literature surrounding the research on how individuals solve problems. The purpose of the review is to heighten awareness amongst nurses in general, and nurse academics in particular about the theories developed, approaches taken and conclusions reached on how clinicians problem-solve.

  10. Clinical Problem Solving Course with Catherine Lucey

    These videos comprise a 6-week course originally debuting on Coursera in 2013. The course is taught by Dr. Catherine Lucy, MD, the Vice Dean of Education in ...

  11. Clinical Problem-Solving

    Jerome P. Kassirer, M.D. IN this issue of the Journal we begin a new series, "Clinical Problem-Solving," which focuses on the difficult diagnostic, therapeutic, and ethical challenges that ...

  12. The Dreyfus model of clinical problem-solving skills acquisition: a

    The complex nature of clinical problem-solving skills and the rich interplay between the implicit and explicit forms of knowledge must be taken into consideration when we want to explain 'acquisition' of clinical skills. The idea that experts work from intuition, not from reason, should be evaluated carefully.

  13. PDF CLINICAL REASONING (is this just one part of the process

    clinical problem that needs immediate attention and one that is less acute (del Bueno, 1994); and a tendency to make errors in time sensitive situations where there is a large amount of complex data to process (O‟Neill, 1994). In clinical practice experienced nurses engage in multiple clinical reasoning episodes for each patient in their care.

  14. PDF CHAPTER 1 What Is Critical Thinking, Clinical Reasoning, and Clinical

    another: critical thinking, clinical reasoning, clinical judgment, decision-making, problem-solving, and nursing process. 4. Identify four principles of the scientifi c method that are evident in CT. 5. Compare and contrast the terms problem-focused thinking and outcome-focused thinking. 6. Clarify the term critical thinking indicator (CTI). 7.

  15. Clinical Problem-Solving

    Clinical Problem-Solving Spinal anesthesia with bupivacaine can precipi - tate hypotension, not hypertension. Although intraoperative hypertension is more common

  16. Clinical Reasoning, Decisionmaking, and Action: Thinking Critically and

    Learning to provide safe and quality health care requires technical expertise, the ability to think critically, experience, and clinical judgment. The high-performance expectation of nurses is dependent upon the nurses' continual learning, professional accountability, independent and interdependent decisionmaking, and creative problem-solving abilities.

  17. What is Problem Solving? Steps, Process & Techniques

    Finding a suitable solution for issues can be accomplished by following the basic four-step problem-solving process and methodology outlined below. Step. Characteristics. 1. Define the problem. Differentiate fact from opinion. Specify underlying causes. Consult each faction involved for information. State the problem specifically.

  18. The Problem-Solving Process

    Problem-solving is a mental process that involves discovering, analyzing, and solving problems. The ultimate goal of problem-solving is to overcome obstacles and find a solution that best resolves the issue. The best strategy for solving a problem depends largely on the unique situation. In some cases, people are better off learning everything ...

  19. What is Clinical Problem Solving

    What is Clinical Problem Solving. The term denotes the processes via which clinical decisions are made in order to improve patient health. The processes include diagnosis (specification of disease by linking symptoms with causes of disease), therapy planning (actions targeted to alleviate the causes of disease), monitoring (actions that are ...

  20. From problem solving to problem definition: scrutinizing the complex

    If we acknowledge that clinical problem definition is not simple and straightforward, but multifaceted, evolving and iterative, then we require a new language for talking about problem solving. A number of other disciplines have grappled with this issue [ 4 ], and one that has developed a useful language is SSE [ 5 - 8 ].

  21. What Is Clinical Problem Solving In Nursing?

    Problem-solving skill means acquiring knowledge to reach a solution, and a person's ability to use this knowledge to find a solution requires critical thinking. The promotion of these skills is considered a necessary condition for nurses' performance in the nursing profession [5, 6]. What is a clinical problem in nursing? […]

  22. Reasoning processes in clinical reasoning: from the perspective of

    From the perspective of cognitive processes, clinical reasoning is considered as one of the decision-making processes that finds the best solutions to patients' illnesses. As a form of decision making for problem solving, two reasoning processes have been considered: inductive and deductive reasoning.