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Finding and fixing mistakes: do checklists work...
Journal article

Finding and fixing mistakes: do checklists work for clinicians with different levels of experience?

Abstract

Checklists that focus attention on key variables might allow clinicians to find and fix their mistakes. However, whether this approach can be applied to clinicians of varying degrees of expertise is unclear. Novice and expert clinicians vary in their predominant reasoning processes and in the types of errors they commit. We studied 44 clinicians with a range of electrocardiography (ECG) interpretation expertise: novice, intermediate and expert. Clinicians were asked to interpret 10 ECGs, self-report their predominant reasoning strategy and then check their interpretation with a checklist. We found that clinicians of all levels of expertise were able to use the checklist to find and fix mistakes. However, novice clinicians disproportionately benefited. Interestingly, while clinicians varied in their self-reported reasoning strategy, there was no relationship between reasoning strategy and checklist benefit.

Authors

Sibbald M; De Bruin ABH; van Merrienboer JJG

Journal

Advances in Health Sciences Education, Vol. 19, No. 1, pp. 43–51

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

March 1, 2014

DOI

10.1007/s10459-013-9459-3

ISSN

1382-4996

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