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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 2/2007

01-02-2007 | Innovations in Education

Practice Inquiry: Clinical Uncertainty as a Focus for Small-Group Learning and Practice Improvement

Authors: Lucia S. Sommers, DrPH, Laura Morgan, MD, Lisa Johnson, MD, Kay Yatabe, MD

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 2/2007

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Abstract

Problem

Many primary care physicians in nonacademic settings lack a collegial forum for engaging the clinical uncertainties inherent in their work.

Program Description

“Practice Inquiry” is proposed as a set of small-group, practice-based learning and improvement (PBLI) methods designed to help clinicians better manage case-based clinical uncertainty. Clinicians meet regularly at their offices/clinics to present dilemma cases, share clinical experience, review evidence for blending with experience, and draw implications for practice improvement. From 2001 through 2005, Practice Inquiry was introduced to sites in the San Francisco Bay Area as a demonstration effort. Meeting rosters, case logs, a feedback survey, and meeting field notes documented implementation and provided data for a formative, qualitative evaluation.

Program Evaluation

Of the 30 sites approached, 14 held introductory meetings. As of summer 2006, 98 clinicians in 11 sites continue to hold regularly scheduled group meetings. Of the 118 patient cases presented in the seven oldest groups, clinician–patient relationship and treatment dilemmas were most common. Clinician feedback and meeting transcript data provided insights into how busy practitioners shared cases, developed trust, and learned new knowledge/skills for moving forward with patients.

Discussion

Ongoing clinician involvement suggests that Practice Inquiry is a feasible, acceptable, and potentially useful set of PBLI methods. Two of the Practice Inquiry’s group learning tasks received comparatively less focus: integrating research evidence with clinical experience and tracking dilemma case outcomes. Future work should focus on reducing the methodological limitations of a demonstration effort and examining factors affecting clinician participation. Set-aside work time for clinicians, or other equally potent incentives, will be necessary for the further elaboration of these PBLI methods aimed at managing uncertainty.
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Metadata
Title
Practice Inquiry: Clinical Uncertainty as a Focus for Small-Group Learning and Practice Improvement
Authors
Lucia S. Sommers, DrPH
Laura Morgan, MD
Lisa Johnson, MD
Kay Yatabe, MD
Publication date
01-02-2007
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 2/2007
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-006-0059-2

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