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Journal ArticleDOI

Comfort with uncertainty: reframing our conceptions of how clinicians navigate complex clinical situations

TLDR
This critical review aims to define and elaborate the concept of ‘comfort with uncertainty’ in clinical settings by juxtaposing a variety of frameworks and theories in ways that generate more deliberate ways of thinking about, and researching, this phenomenon.
Abstract
Learning to take safe and effective action in complex settings rife with uncertainty is essential for patient safety and quality care. Doing so is not easy for trainees, as they often consider certainty to be a necessary precursor for action and subsequently struggle in these settings. Understanding how skillful clinicians work comfortably when uncertain, therefore, offers an important opportunity to facilitate trainees' clinical reasoning development. This critical review aims to define and elaborate the concept of 'comfort with uncertainty' in clinical settings by juxtaposing a variety of frameworks and theories in ways that generate more deliberate ways of thinking about, and researching, this phenomenon. We used Google Scholar to identify theoretical concepts and findings relevant to the topics of 'uncertainty,' 'ambiguity,' 'comfort,' and 'confidence,' and then used preliminary findings to pursue parallel searches within the social cognition, cognition, sociology, sociocultural, philosophy of medicine, and medical education literatures. We treat uncertainty as representing the lived experience of individuals, reflecting the lack of confidence one feels that he/she has an incomplete mental representation of a particular problem. Comfort, in contrast, references confidence in one's capabilities to act (or not act) in a safe and effective manner given the situation. Clinicians' 'comfort with uncertainty' is informed by a variety of perceptual, emotional, and situational cues, and is enabled through a combination of self-monitoring and forward planning. Potential implications of using 'comfort with uncertainty' as a framework for educational and research programs are explored.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Consensus statement on the content of clinical reasoning curricula in undergraduate medical education

TL;DR: What is taught, how it is teaching, and when it is taught can facilitate clinical reasoning development more effectively through purposeful curriculum design and medical schools should consider implementing a formal clinical reasoning curriculum that is horizontally and vertically integrated throughout the programme.
Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding and managing uncertainty in health care: revisiting and advancing sociological contributions.

TL;DR: This collection revisits the enduring phenomenon of uncertainty in health care, and demonstrates how it still offers coherence and significance as an analytic concept, through empirical studies of contemporary examples of health care related uncertainties and their management.
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Bridging the gap between uncertainty, confidence and diagnostic accuracy: calibration is key.

TL;DR: A medium to large correlation between experience and tolerance of risk is reported and more experienced clinicians made less risk averse decisions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Learning to manage uncertainty: supervision, trust and autonomy in residency training.

TL;DR: Ethnicographic case studies of academic medical centres in Switzerland and the United States provide new insights into the processes through which residents learnt to manage uncertainty, including working under supervision, developing relationships of trust with supervisors and gaining autonomy to practise independently.
Journal ArticleDOI

Tolerance for Ambiguity Among Medical Students: Patterns of Change During Medical School and Their Implications for Professional Development.

TL;DR: It is suggested that medical students' TFA changes over time, but in different directions depending on TFA at matriculation, and that TFA over time was also associated with change in empathy and openness to diversity.
References
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Book

Stress, appraisal, and coping

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a detailed theory of psychological stress, building on the concepts of cognitive appraisal and coping, which have become major themes of theory and investigation in psychology.
Book

Emotion and Adaptation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the person-environment relationship: motivation and coping Cognition and emotion Issues of causality, goal incongruent (negative) emotions Goal congruent (positive) and problematic emotions.
Journal ArticleDOI

A typology of reviews: An analysis of 14 review types and associated methodologies

TL;DR: Few review types possess prescribed and explicit methodologies and many fall short of being mutually exclusive, but this typology provides a valuable reference point for those commissioning, conducting, supporting or interpreting reviews, both within health information and the wider health care domain.
Journal ArticleDOI

Gorillas in our midst: sustained inattentional blindness for dynamic events.

TL;DR: A new study builds on classic studies of divided visual attention to examine inattentional blindness for complex objects and events in dynamic scenes and suggests that the likelihood of noticing an unexpected object depends on the similarity of that object to other objects in the display and on how difficult the priming monitoring task is.
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