Cox, Caitríona Hatfield, Thea Fritz, Zoë
BACKGROUND: Diagnostic uncertainty is common, but its communication to patients is under-explored. This study aimed to (1) characterise variation in doctors' communication of diagnostic uncertainty and (2) explore why variation occurred. METHODS: Four written vignettes of clinical scenarios involving diagnostic uncertainty were developed. Doctors w...
Hepburn, Jordan
Published in
Musculoskeletal care
Hicks, Patrice M Singh, Karandeep Prajna, N Venkatesh Lu, Ming-Chen Niziol, Leslie M Greenwald, Miles F Verkade, Angela Amescua, Guillermo Farsiu, Sina Woodward, Maria A
...
Published in
Cornea
There is a need to understand physicians' diagnostic uncertainty in the initial management of microbial keratitis (MK). This study aimed to understand corneal specialists' diagnostic uncertainty by establishing risk thresholds for treatment of MK that could be used to inform a decision curve analysis for prediction modeling. A cross-sectional surve...
Young, Eleanor E. Kane, Joelle Timmons, Kristen Kelley, Jodi Hagedorn, Philip A. Brady, Patrick W. Marshall, Trisha L.
Published in
Diagnosis
Objectives Diagnostic uncertainty is not reliably communicated to patients and caregivers. This study aims to identify barriers and facilitators to effective communication of diagnostic uncertainty, including development of potential tools and strategies for improvement, as perceived by healthcare professionals and caregivers. Methods We completed ...
Cox, Caitríona Hatfield, Thea Fritz, Zoë
Publication status: Published / Abstract
Background
Diagnostic uncertainty is common, but its communication to patients is under‐explored. This study aimed to (1) characterise variation in doctors' communication of diagnostic uncertainty and (2) explore why variation occurred.
Methods
Four written vignettes of clinical scenarios involving diagnostic un...
Cornell, Ella G. Harris, Emily McCune, Emma Fukui, Elle Lyons, Patrick G. Rojas, Juan C. Santhosh, Lekshmi
Published in
Diagnosis
Objectives The transition from the intensive care unit (ICU) to the medical ward is a high-risk period due to medical complexity, reduced patient monitoring, and diagnostic uncertainty. Standardized handoff practices reduce errors associated with transitions of care, but little work has been done to standardize the ICU to ward handoff. Further, too...
Mrosak, Justine Kandaswamy, Swaminathan Stokes, Claire Roth, David Gorbatkin, Jenna Dave, Ishaan Gillespie, Scott Orenstein, Evan
Published in
JMIR Medical Informatics
Background Clinical practice guidelines (CPGs) and associated order sets can help standardize patient care and lead to higher-value patient care. However, difficult access and poor usability of these order sets can result in lower use rates and reduce the CPGs’ impact on clinical outcomes. At our institution, we identified multiple CPGs for general...
Ward, Caitlin Brown, Grant D Oleson, Jacob J
Published in
Biometrics
Bayesian compartmental infectious disease models yield important inference on disease transmission by appropriately accounting for the dynamics and uncertainty of infection processes. In addition to estimating transition probabilities and reproductive numbers, these statistical models allow researchers to assess the probability of disease risk and ...
Elder, David Eguchi, Megan Barnhill, Raymond Kerr, Kathleen Knezevich, Stevan Piepkorn, Michael Reisch, Lisa Elmore, Joann
Diagnostic error can be defined as deviation from a gold standard diagnosis, typically defined in terms of expert opinion, although sometimes in terms of unexpected events that might occur in follow-up (such as progression and death from disease). Although diagnostic error does exist for melanoma, deviations from gold standard diagnosis, certainly ...
Elder, David E. Eguchi, Megan M. Barnhill, Raymond L. Kerr, Kathleen F. Knezevich, Stevan R. Piepkorn, Michael W. Reisch, Lisa M. Elmore, Joann G.
Published in
Pathology
Diagnostic error can be defined as deviation from a gold standard diagnosis, typically defined in terms of expert opinion, although sometimes in terms of unexpected events that might occur in follow-up (such as progression and death from disease). Although diagnostic error does exist for melanoma, deviations from gold standard diagnosis, certainly ...