Palchik N S, Wolf F M, Cassidy J T, Ike R W, Davis W K
Department of Postgraduate Medicine and Health Professions Education, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor 48109-0201.
Acad Med. 1990 Feb;65(2):107-13. doi: 10.1097/00001888-199002000-00012.
Using a broad range of written patient management problems (PMPs), this study examined (1) how each of three medical information-gathering processes (history-taking, physical examination, and diagnostic studies) influenced 175 second-year medical students' formulations of the differential (i.e., plausible) and the principal (i.e., most probable) diagnoses for each of 14 PMPs, and (2) the extent to which these results paralleled the emphases that experienced clinicians placed on these same information-gathering processes regarding each of the same PMPs. The results suggest that in ten of the 14 PMPs the students appeared to rely on specific information-gathering strategies in formulating their diagnoses, and that both similarities and differences existed between the levels of emphasis placed by the students and physicians on each of the three processes. In general, the physicians placed greater emphasis on the importance of the history, whereas the students relied more on diagnostic studies. These variations have implications for selecting medical problems for purposes of instruction and evaluation of students.
本研究使用了广泛的书面患者管理问题(PMPs),考察了:(1)三种医学信息收集过程(病史采集、体格检查和诊断性检查)中的每一种如何影响175名二年级医学生对14个PMPs中每一个的鉴别诊断(即合理的)和主要诊断(即最可能的)的形成;(2)这些结果与经验丰富的临床医生对相同PMPs中每一个的这些相同信息收集过程的重视程度的平行程度。结果表明,在14个PMPs中的10个中,学生在形成诊断时似乎依赖于特定的信息收集策略,并且学生和医生对这三个过程中每一个的重视程度存在异同。总体而言,医生更强调病史的重要性,而学生更多地依赖诊断性检查。这些差异对于为学生的教学和评估选择医学问题具有启示意义。