Clinical reasoning in undergraduate paramedicine: utilisation of a script concordance test

Clinical reasoning is a complex cognitive and metacognitive process paramount to patient care in paramedic practice. While universally recognised as an essential component of practice, clinical reasoning has been historically difficult to assess in health care professions. Is the Script Concordance...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC medical education 2023-01, Vol.23 (1), p.39-39, Article 39
Hauptverfasser: Ross, Linda, Semaan, Eli, Gosling, Cameron M, Fisk, Benjamin, Shannon, Brendan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Clinical reasoning is a complex cognitive and metacognitive process paramount to patient care in paramedic practice. While universally recognised as an essential component of practice, clinical reasoning has been historically difficult to assess in health care professions. Is the Script Concordance Test (SCT) an achievable and reliable option to test clinical reasoning in undergraduate paramedic students? This was a single institution observational cohort study designed to use the SCT to measure clinical reasoning in paramedic students. Clinical vignettes were constructed across a range of concepts with varying shades of clinical ambiguity. A reference panel mean scores of the test were compared to that of students. Test responses were graded with the aggregate scoring method with scores awarded for both partially and fully correct responses. Eighty-three student paramedic participants (mean age: 21.8 (3.5) years, 54 (65%) female, 27 (33%) male and 2 (2%) non-binary) completed the SCT. The difference between the reference group mean score of 80 (5) and student mean of score of 65.6 (8.4) was statistically significant (p 
ISSN:1472-6920
1472-6920
DOI:10.1186/s12909-023-04020-x