MedEdPORTAL (Sep 2024)

Interprofessional Coproduction of Diagnosis with Medical and Pharmacy Students: An Interactive Case-Based Workshop

  • Valerie J. Lang,
  • Melanie R. Symoniak,
  • Sha-Phawn Williams

DOI
https://doi.org/10.15766/mep_2374-8265.11437
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20

Abstract

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Introduction The Institute of Medicine and national competencies emphasize the importance of interprofessional education to reduce diagnostic error. Clinical pharmacists are increasingly integrated into clinical teams and participate in the diagnostic process. However, few educational resources explicitly teach medical and pharmacy students to collaborate on the production of diagnoses. Methods We implemented a 2-hour, online, case-based workshop with 154 second-year medical students and third-year pharmacy students. After brief didactics on the diagnostic process and scope of practice of pharmacists, small groups of eight to 12 medical and pharmacy students with faculty facilitators worked through a case unfolding in two aliquots. Students were provided different but complementary information authentic to their profession. They had to communicate with each other to develop an appropriate differential diagnosis. Students then reflected on how communicating with the other profession impacted their diagnostic reasoning. Comments were coded and counted. Results The majority (99%) of students identified their data gathering and differential diagnoses were impacted by working through the case together. More pharmacy students commented on how medical students broadened their differential diagnosis (71%) and added information (72%), contextualizing information, such as past history, medication indications, and physical exam data. More medical students commented on how pharmacy students helped justify (54%) and clarify (22%) the differential diagnosis, often connecting the underlying mechanism of medications with clinical findings. Discussion This interactive case-based workshop was effective in teaching medical and pharmacy students to collaborate in the coproduction of diagnosis. It is feasible with minimal resources.

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