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Critical Thinking in Critical Care: Five Strategies to Improve Teaching and Learning in the Intensive Care Unit
by
Schwartzstein, Richard M.
, Hayes, Margaret M.
, Chatterjee, Souvik
in
Clinical Competence
/ Critical Care
/ Education, Medical, Graduate - methods
/ Humans
/ Intensive Care Units
/ Quality Improvement
/ Seminars for Medical Educators
/ Teaching
/ Thinking
2017
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Critical Thinking in Critical Care: Five Strategies to Improve Teaching and Learning in the Intensive Care Unit
by
Schwartzstein, Richard M.
, Hayes, Margaret M.
, Chatterjee, Souvik
in
Clinical Competence
/ Critical Care
/ Education, Medical, Graduate - methods
/ Humans
/ Intensive Care Units
/ Quality Improvement
/ Seminars for Medical Educators
/ Teaching
/ Thinking
2017
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Do you wish to request the book?
Critical Thinking in Critical Care: Five Strategies to Improve Teaching and Learning in the Intensive Care Unit
by
Schwartzstein, Richard M.
, Hayes, Margaret M.
, Chatterjee, Souvik
in
Clinical Competence
/ Critical Care
/ Education, Medical, Graduate - methods
/ Humans
/ Intensive Care Units
/ Quality Improvement
/ Seminars for Medical Educators
/ Teaching
/ Thinking
2017
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Critical Thinking in Critical Care: Five Strategies to Improve Teaching and Learning in the Intensive Care Unit
Journal Article
Critical Thinking in Critical Care: Five Strategies to Improve Teaching and Learning in the Intensive Care Unit
2017
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Overview
Critical thinking, the capacity to be deliberate about thinking, is increasingly the focus of undergraduate medical education, but is not commonly addressed in graduate medical education. Without critical thinking, physicians, and particularly residents, are prone to cognitive errors, which can lead to diagnostic errors, especially in a high-stakes environment such as the intensive care unit. Although challenging, critical thinking skills can be taught. At this time, there is a paucity of data to support an educational gold standard for teaching critical thinking, but we believe that five strategies, routed in cognitive theory and our personal teaching experiences, provide an effective framework to teach critical thinking in the intensive care unit. The five strategies are: make the thinking process explicit by helping learners understand that the brain uses two cognitive processes: type 1, an intuitive pattern-recognizing process, and type 2, an analytic process; discuss cognitive biases, such as premature closure, and teach residents to minimize biases by expressing uncertainty and keeping differentials broad; model and teach inductive reasoning by utilizing concept and mechanism maps and explicitly teach how this reasoning differs from the more commonly used hypothetico-deductive reasoning; use questions to stimulate critical thinking: “how” or “why” questions can be used to coach trainees and to uncover their thought processes; and assess and provide feedback on learner’s critical thinking. We believe these five strategies provide practical approaches for teaching critical thinking in the intensive care unit.
Publisher
Oxford University Press,American Thoracic Society
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