Today@Dal
» Go to news mainMedia Highlight: A healthy dose of critical thinking
Posted Sunday by the Chronicle Herald:
When first-year medical students started their program at 麻豆传媒 last month, they got a dose of training unavailable to previous generations of doctors-to-be.
They received early instruction on a crucial component of a doctor鈥檚 modus operandi 鈥 critical thinking.
Call it Decision Making 101.
麻豆传媒鈥檚 freshman class of med students, like older medical trainees, 鈥渘eed to be told how they think,鈥 Dr. Pat Croskerry said.
A patient-safety expert, Croskerry is an emergency medicine physician and the director of the critical thinking program at the university鈥檚 medical school. The program was established last year.
The thinking process delivered by our brains 鈥 activity that produces judgment, analysis, intuition 鈥 can also turn out biases, Croskerry said recently. That could lead to such counterproductive or harmful diagnostic side-effects as tunnel vision and medical errors.
Although doctors who鈥檝e been working longer than those beginning their medical careers are likely to be correct more often than not, knowledgeable physicians are not infallible.
鈥淵ou see classic mistakes being made by experienced people鈥 in the medical profession and many other fields, Croskerry said.
At 麻豆传媒, critical thinking and decision making are now built into the med school鈥檚 curriculum, he said. Decision making is even discussed during the first-year students鈥 orientation week.
.
Recent News
- Food services survey deadline extended
- In Memoriam: Dr. Herbert Hancock
- Newest OpenThink articles now available
- Where suppliers can meet Dal Procurement
- Job postings
- Applications open for Collide Validate
- Save the date: Mini Medical School
- Reading week food service hours in the SUB