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Diagnosing conflict: Conflicting data,...
Journal article

Diagnosing conflict: Conflicting data, interpersonal conflict, and conflicts of interest in clinical competency committees

Abstract

Clinical competency committees (CCCs) are increasingly used within health professions education as their decisions are thought to be more defensible and fairer than those generated by previous training promotion processes. However, as with most group-based processes, it is inevitable that conflict will arise. In this paper the authors explore three ways conflict may arise within a CCC: (1) conflicting data submissions that are presented to the committee, (2) conflicts between members of the committee, and (3) conflicts of interest between a specific committee member and a trainee. The authors describe each of these conflict situations, dissect out the underlying problems, and explore possible solutions based on the current literature.

Authors

Chan T; Oswald A; Hauer KE; Caretta-Weyer HA; Nousiainen MT; Cheung WJ; Collaborators OBOTI

Journal

Medical Teacher, Vol. 43, No. 7, pp. 765–773

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

July 3, 2021

DOI

10.1080/0142159x.2021.1925101

ISSN

0142-159X

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