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Clinical reasoning entails the application of knowledge and skills to collect and integrate information, typically with the goal of arriving at a diagnosis and management plan based on the patient's unique circumstances and preferences. Evidence-informed, structured, and explicit teaching and assessment of clinical reasoning in educational programs of medical and other health professions remain unmet needs. We herein summarize recommendations for clinical reasoning learning objectives (LOs), as derived from a consensus approach among European and US researchers and health professions educators. A four-step consensus approach was followed: (1) identification of a convenience sample of the most relevant and applied national LO catalogues for health professions educational programs (N = 9) from European and US countries, (2) extraction of LOs related to clinical reasoning and translation into English, (3) mapping of LOs into predefined categories developed within the Erasmus+ Developing, implementing, and disseminating an adaptive clinical reasoning curriculum for healthcare students and educators (DID-ACT) consortium, and (4) synthesis of analysis findings into recommendations for how LOs related to clinical reasoning could be presented and incorporated in LO catalogues, upon consensus. Three distinct recommendations were formulated: (1) make clinical reasoning explicit, (2) emphasize interprofessional and collaboration aspects of clinical reasoning, and (3) include aspects of teaching and assessment of clinical reasoning. In addition, the consortium understood that implementation of bilingual catalogues with English as a common language might contribute to lower heterogeneity regarding amount, structure, and level of granularity of clinical reasoning LOs across countries. These recommendations will hopefully motivate and guide initiatives towards the implementation of LOs related to clinical reasoning in existing and future LO catalogues.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph182111202 | DOI Listing |
MedEdPublish (2016)
May 2025
Newcastle University Faculty of Medical Sciences, Newcastle upon Tyne, England, UK.
Background: Whilst debriefing literature offers valuable tools for healthcare education, there remains a gap in resources specifically designed for debriefing communication skills. Effective communication is fundamental to patient care, particularly during sensitive interactions. This article provides a specialised toolkit for educators to enhance communication skills debriefing, developed through synthesis of existing literature and the authors' extensive experience teaching communication skills through simulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNurse Educ Pract
September 2025
Department of Allied Health Education and Digital Learning, National Taipei University of Nursing and Health Sciences, Taipei, Taiwan, ROC. Electronic address:
Aim: To evaluate the effectiveness of the CARES-MFW (Clinical Augmented Reality Education Simulation for Malignant Fungating Wounds) app in enhancing nurses' knowledge and clinical reasoning in the care of MFWs.
Background: Malignant fungating wounds (MFWs) affect many patients with advanced cancer, with nearly 50 % dying within six months of diagnosis. These wounds often present with heavy exudate, pain, malodor and bleeding, leading to profound physical and psychosocial distress.
J Alzheimers Dis
September 2025
The Framingham Heart Study, Framingham, MA, USA.
BackgroundWomen have a higher risk of dementia than men. Reproductive factors may be implicated.ObjectiveDetermine the association between reproductive factors (earlier menarche, later menopause, longer reproductive lifespan (RLS), post-menopausal hormone replacement therapy [pmHRT] use, and serum estradiol/estrone) and neurocognitive and neuroimaging markers of brain aging and incident dementia in cognitively healthy women.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Anaesthesiol Scand
October 2025
Copenhagen Trial Unit, Centre for Clinical Intervention Research, The Capital Region, Copenhagen University Hospital - Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Introduction: Electronic health records can be used to create high-quality databases if data are structured and well-registered, which is the case for most perioperative data in the Capital and Zealand Regions of Denmark. We present the purpose and development of the AI and Automation in Anaesthesia (TRIPLE-A) database-a platform designed for epidemiology, prediction, quality control, and automated research data collection.
Methods: Data collection from the electronic medical record (EPIC Systems Corporation, WI, USA) was approved by the Capital Region, Denmark, and ethical approval was waived.
SAGE Open Nurs
September 2025
Department of Public Health Nursing, School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Ghana, Legon, Ghana.
Introduction: The world is in an era where healthcare professionals require training in soft skills to improve their caring ability. Regrettably, a concise compilation of nursing soft skills remains empirically unclassified.
Objectives: This study described a perceived list of soft skills necessary in nursing, as itemized by nurses and midwives in Ghana.