Abstract
OBJECTIVES
As physicians are being trained to adapt their practices to the needs and experience of patients, initiatives to standardize
care have been gaining momentum. The resulting conflict can be addressed through a practice-based learning and improvement
(PBL) program that develops competency in using treatment guidelines as decision aids and incorporating patient-specific information
into treatment recommendations. This article describes and tests a program that is consistent with the ACGME's multilevel
competency-based approach, targets students at four levels of training, and features progressive learning objectives and assessments.
METHODS
The program was pilot-tested with 22 paid volunteer psychiatric residents and fellows. They were introduced to a schizophrenia
treatment guideline and reviewed six case vignettes of varying complexity. PBL assessments were based on how treatment recommendations
were influenced by clinical and patient-specific factors. The task permitted separate assessments of learning objectives all
four training levels.
RESULTS
Among the key findings at each level, most participants found the treatment guideline helpful in making treatment decisions.
Recommendations were influenced by guideline-based assessment criteria and other clinical features. They were also influenced
by patients' perceptions of their illness, patient-based progress assessments, and complications such as stressors and coping
patterns. Recommendations were strongly influenced by incongruence between clinical facts and patient experience.
CONCLUSION
Practical understanding of how patient experience joins with clinical knowledge can enhance the use of treatment guidelines
as decision tools and enable clinicians to appreciate more fully how and why patients' perceptions of their illness should
influence treatment recommendations. This PBL program can assist training facilities in preparing students to cope with contradictory
demands to both standardize and adapt their practice. The program can be modified to accommodate various disorders and a range
of clinical factors and patient-specific complications.
Links
Authors
Institution
Clinical Epidemiology Research Center, VA Connecticut Healthcare System, New Haven, CT, USA. paul.falzer@yale.edu
Source
Academic psychiatry : the journal of the American Association of Directors of Psychiatric Residency Training and the Association for Academic Psychiatry 36:2 2012 Mar 1 pg 104-9MeSH
AdultClinical Competence
Decision Making
Decision Support Techniques
Evidence-Based Medicine
Female
Humans
Internship and Residency
Male
Pilot Projects
Problem-Based Learning
Psychiatry
Schizophrenia
Pub Type(s)
Journal ArticleLanguage
eng
PubMed ID
22532198
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