Lowenthal & Abrams Injury Attorneys
 
  Call us 800.876.LAWYER    PENNSYLVANIA - NEW JERSEY - NEW YORK - DELAWARE - CALIFORNIA - WEST VIRGINIA
 
   
 Practice Areas

MEDICAL MALPRACTICE
Pennsylvania Medical Malpractice Attorneys
WORKERS' COMPENSATION
Philadelphia Personal Injury Lawyers
PERSONAL INJURY
Philadelphia Personal Injury Lawyers
WRONGFUL DEATH
BIRTH INJURIES
Pennsylvania Workers' Compensation Attorneys
AUTO ACCIDENTS
SLIP AND FALL
PREMISES LIABILITY
DRUG RECALLS

 Main Menu

INJURY ATTORNEYS HOME
MEET OUR FIRM
WHY CHOOSE  L & A
FREE LEGAL TIPS
OUR LOCATION
CONTACT US
STATUTES & LAWS
ACCIDENT RESOURCES
LEGAL NEWSROOM
PA INJURED WORKERS
ASSOCIATION (PIWA)
PA Injured Workers Associstion
VIEW OUR NEWSLETTERS
VIEW OUR VIDEO INTRODUCTION
AS SEEN ON TV COMMERCIALS
 

 

Lowenthal & Abrams
Injury Attorneys

Pennsylvania Office:
610-667-7511
610-667-3440 fax
555 City Line Avenue
Suite 500
Bala Cynwyd, PA 19004
driving directions and
map to office


New Jersey Office:
856-667-7515
856-667-8666 fax
385 Kings Highway North
Suite 210
Cherry Hill, NJ 08034
map to office


Firm Attorneys:

Jeffrey P. Lowenthal
Dennis M. Abrams
Esther M. Gallagher, M.D.
James B. Mogul
John L. Aris
Edward B. Feiner
Richard Zemble

 



Injury Attorneys Home > Legal Newsroom > Newsroom

Newsroom

Legal Newsroom

< Back to Previous Page

Lehigh Valley Hospital Study Of Department Of Emergency Medicine

Department of Emergency Medicine, Lehigh Valley Hospital, Allentown, PA, USA.

PURPOSE: Recent literature defines certain cognitive errors that emergency physicians will likely encounter. The authors have utilized simulation and debriefing to teach the concepts of metacognition and error avoidance. METHOD: The authors conducted a qualitative study of an educational intervention at Lehigh Valley Hospital during academic year 2002-03. Fifteen emergency medicine residents--eight from postgraduate year three (PGY3) and seven from postgraduate year two (PGY2)--experienced a difficult simulator lab scenario designed to lead them into a cognitive error trap. The debriefing was a PowerPoint with audio format CD-ROM with a didactic on succinylcholine (15 minutes) and cognitive forcing strategies (30 minutes). After debriefing, residents were interviewed by an ethnographer with an 11-question (15-minute) interview and completed an eight-question written survey.

RESULTS: The residents ranked this experience second only to direct patient care for educational effectiveness. Survey results (Likert scale, 1 = disagree completely to 5 = agree completely) included "Improved my ability to use succinylcholine" (mean = 4.73), "Improved my ability to diagnose and treat hyperkalemia" (mean = 4.6), and "Cognitive forcing strategies is a useful educational effort" (mean = 4.33). The major interview themes that evolved were that the simulation lab was a positive experience; succinylcholine knowledge was gained; mistakes caused reflection/motivation; the lab was stressful; attending feedback was desired; the lab was realistic; and cognitive forcing strategies were discussed. When asked what they learned, more of the PGY3s commented on cognitive strategies or heuristic techniques (six out of eight), whereas the PGY2s commented on knowledge gained about succinylcholine (five out of seven) and only one PGY2 mentioned cognitive strategies.

CONCLUSION: Pilot data suggest that metacognitive strategies can be taught to residents, though they may be better understood by upper-level residents.

Reference: PMID: 15107283 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

Call Our Toll Free: 610-667-7511 or Contact Our Pennsylvania Personal Injury Lawyers Online For a No-Obligation Consultation