Showing posts with label prep. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prep. Show all posts

Case preparation

April 7, 2015

An SP prepares for a case.
[study for The Apotheosis of Homer via wikimedia]

Since I work for so many different schools, I've had to develop a case preparation method that is able handle as many different cases styles and expectations as possible.

Cases are often written poorly, with important information scattered or repeated in slightly different ways. Sometimes a case seems clear until a student begins asking questions, at which point you realize you're missing a key piece of information.

So here's how I analyze a case to prepare for an event at any event that follows an OSCE-like model:

  • Apply heuristics: In the same way students memorize chunks of questions in order to routinize the asking of them, so do I. So regardless of how the case is written, I review it by looking at the elements categorically. Do I know the answers to the most common HPI questions? Do I know the answers to the basic questions for the patient's history, like... PMH: meds, allergies, surgeries, hospitalizations; FMH: parents, siblings, grandparents; SHx: tobacco, drugs, alcohol, diet, exercise, occupation, living situation. Because none of the schools I work with teach us these heuristics, it took me several years to be able to recognize the categorical details underlying most cases.
  • Organize top to bottom: Often symptoms are not written in any particular order that I can see. This is made especially difficult if I need to track symptoms the character doesn't actually have but that students need to ask about for credit. So to help me memorize them, I re-organize them in order from top to bottom. Things like fever, dizziness, and headaches are at the top of the list, things like leg edema are at the bottom. Sometimes I may even draw a little person with appropriate markings to help me visualize the symptoms. I also do this for the PE.
  • Create kinetic cues: When re-organizing symptoms, I will also create a gesture for each item. It's pretty easy to forget whether a student has asked about a particular symptom during a long encounter, or after several encounters. Performing a gesture at the same time as I answer the question helps me retain it longer. For instance, if a student asks if I have had a headache, regardless of the answer I may touch my temple. If the gesture is natural enough, the student won't notice it at all. If it's less natural, I may wait until the student is looking down at the clipboard. 
  • Create a timeline: This is especially important for cases with a lot of past medical history or social history. It's so helpful to see the progression of things in a clear, logical order.
  • Create acronyms: for schools that have social checklist items I tend to forget to watch for during the encounter, I create an acronym to review with myself periodically during the encounter. For instance, sometimes I forget to mentally check if the introduction is complete. So if I am at a school that wants me to track the introduction, empathy, rapport and whether the student used my name, the acronym might be ERIN (Empathy Rapport Intro Name).
  • Rewrite: I frequently rewrite cases in ways that make more sense to me. For instance, I may rewrite a case using only positive findings, rather than trying to remember which findings are positive and which ones are negative. I frequently rewrite a case using only the heuristics and use that as my main case review. I may rewrite a case listing differences & similarities between characters if I am doing similar cases at different schools.

Discussion question:
What tricks do you have for preparing, organizing or memorizing a case?