Volume 2, Issue 4 pp. 336-338
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Strategic Questioning in Emergency Medicine Training

Jordan Tozer MD

Jordan Tozer MD

Department of Emergency Medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA

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Timothy Layng DO

Corresponding Author

Timothy Layng DO

Department of Emergency Medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA

Address for correspondence and reprints: Jordan Tozer, MD; e-mail: [email protected].Search for more papers by this author
Margaret Wolff MD

Margaret Wolff MD

Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, MI

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Sally A. Santen MD, PhD

Sally A. Santen MD, PhD

Department of Emergency Medicine, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA

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First published: 24 August 2018
Citations: 1
The authors have no relevant financial information or potential conflicts to disclose.

Abstract

Strategic questioning is a technique that can enhance the unique learning environment of emergency medicine (EM) training. By incorporating this into the routine expert–learner encounters of daily practice, it can be used to engage learners, explore their knowledge base, probe for gaps, encourage development, and grow critical thinking skills. We propose that this become routinely used in EM training as a tool to strengthen residency education.

The emergency department (ED) is an environment rife with uncertainty and interruptions, quick patient turnover, and often brief yet critical patient encounters. While residency education in emergency medicine (EM) shares some similarities to other specialties, such as formal sign-out and structured teaching sessions, the constant presence of attending physicians in the ED makes this training environment unique among other medical specialties. This combination of fast-paced learning environment coupled with the constant presence of supervising physicians creates incredible potential for learning.

One approach to help realize this potential is strategic, question-prompted learning. This approach adapts the Socratic method, with guidance from Bloom's taxonomy, to create a learner-centered, progressively complex questioning strategy by which the instructor can identify knowledge gaps and stimulate critical thought in an environment of mutual respect with a graduated design. Interpretations of Socratic questioning have taken many forms, but the modern approach is rooted in three consistent components: working collaboratively with the learner; probing, open-ended questions; and reflection with focused discussion.1, 2

Similarly, Bloom's taxonomy is a hierarchical model used to classify learning. Therefore, strategic questioning that uses Bloom's taxonomy as a scaffold can guide learners from basic recall to critical thinking and reflection. Dialogue can begin with convergent questions (closed-ended, seeking a specific response) to identify the learner's knowledge base while probing for gaps and evolve into divergent questions (open-ended, requiring application of thought to develop an answer) with an escalating level of complexity as the learner progresses.3, 4 By traversing this model, the learner can build on each step and climb the ladder through understanding, applying, analyzing, and evaluating (Table 1).

Table 1. Blooms Taxonomy for the EM Trainee
Categories Key Words EM specific Sample Questions

Remember/understand

  • Recall of facts and basic concepts
  • Explain results, discuss concepts

Define

List

State

Describe

Recognize

Explain

  • What is the most common cause of …?
  • How many differentials can you list for …?
  • Explain what happens when …?
  • What is an example of …?
  • What are common risk factors for venous thromboembolic disease?
  • How would you assess for PE?

Apply/analyze

  • Interpret results and carry out basic plans
  • Critical examination assimilate facts into meaningful framework

Interpret

Demonstrate

Execute

Organize

Question

Relate

Compare and contrast

  • What approach can you use to …?
  • What would result if …?
  • Demonstrate how to …
  • What is the problem with …?How is this similar to …?
  • Can you distinguish between …?
  • A patient is found to have subsegmental PE after surgery. What are your initial treatment options?
  • What if the patient was found to have submassive PE needing oxygen; how would your approach change?

Evaluate/create

  • Making judgments about the merits of ideas and plans
  • Putting ideas together to create new original work

Appraise

Critique

Justify

Develop

Construct

Investigate

  • How would you prioritize …?
  • Do you agree with …? Why?
  • Why did you decide to …?
  • What alternative would you propose …?
  • What can be done to maximize …?
  • How would you design …?
  • Justify your decision to give systemic lytics instead of catheter-directed thrombolysis.
  • How could you improve hospital-wide approach to acute PE care?
  • PE = pulmonary embolism.

Bloom's taxonomy has also been molded into a variety of different uses since inception over 60 years ago. In 2007, Marzano and Kendall5 proposed “The New Taxonomy of Educational Objectives,” which served as an update to Bloom's that “incorporated modern advances in the understanding of human thought and the structure of knowledge.” This model more accurately reflects the breadth of skills demonstrated in the ED. For example, if an instructor asked a learner to recall a fact, this would come from the recall level of the information domain. Similarly, debriefing after a failed intubation would come from the awareness and reflection level of both the mental processing and the psychomotor domain (Figure 1).

Details are in the caption following the image
Bloom's new taxonomy.

To effectively perform the question-prompted learning approach in the ED, attendings must foster a safe learning environment through mutual respect between the instructor and learner, in contrast to traditionally unidirectional “pimping.” Once this groundwork has been lain, the teacher should first focus on the lower-order questions, especially if the learner is unfamiliar, to characterize their knowledge base. This step can be done repeatedly across the spectrum of core knowledge competencies. It would be unreasonable to ask a learner to describe comprehensive sepsis management before you have confirmed that they can first recognize the condition. If significant deficiencies are identified with lower-order questioning, the instructor should not move on to higher levels, but rather spend time remediating. Once a learner has demonstrated solid foundational knowledge, the instructor should escalate question complexity, striving to push the learner toward critical thinking. If working in a group setting with multiple levels of learners present, the attending should attempt to direct questions with increasing difficulty toward senior learners in the presence of junior learners, thereby making critical thinking transparent.

An approach to strategic, question-prompted learning involving a patient presenting with a myocardial infarction is illustrated in Table 2. Questions at the recall level probe the learner to simply remember medical knowledge. After identifying these data points, they can be strung together by understanding the presentation of disease. Applying questions will allow learners to demonstrate knowledge by implementing a plan. Analyzing questions allow learners to begin deeper exploration. Evaluating questions allow the learner to weigh the pros and cons of differing strategies. And finally, creating questions challenge the learner to assimilate ideas into new original work, although this higher level is not routinely achieved during typical encounters.

Table 2. Strategic Questioning Example: Myocardial Infarction
Questioning Level Learner Action EM-specific Sample Questions
Recall Remember medical knowledge
  • What are the common risk factors for myocardial infarction?
  • What is the patient's HEART score?
  • When does the serum troponin level peak?
Understanding Organize and assimilate data
  • Can you describe the difference between stable and unstable angina?
  • What is the difference between STEMI and NSTEMI?
  • Patients with which HEART scores should be considered for admission?
Applying Demonstrate knowledge by implementing a plan
  • What is the initial ED treatment for acute anterior myocardial infarction?
Analyzing Begin deeper problem exploration
  • What if your patient had a posterior MI?
  • What if your patient became unstable?
  • How would initial management change if you were practicing at a smaller rural hospital?
Evaluating Weigh the pros and cons of different strategies
  • Justify your decision to give systemic lytics.
  • Justify your decision to mobilize the cardiac cath lab at midnight?
Creating Assimilate ideas into new original work
  • How would you investigate the effectiveness of a new antiplatelet agent given during suspected acute myocardial infarction?
  • MI = myocardial infarction; NSTEMI = non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction; STEMI = ST-elevation myocardial infarction.

Strategic questioning is a technique that can enhance the unique learning environment of EM training. By incorporating this into the routine expert–learner encounters of daily practice, it can be used to engage learners, explore their knowledge base, probe for gaps, encourage development, and grow critical thinking skills.6 We propose that this become routinely used in EM training as a tool to strengthen residency education.

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