A Case Study in Medical Error: The Use of the Portfolio Entry
Open Access
- 1 April 2004
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Wiley in Academic Emergency Medicine
- Vol. 11 (4) , 388-392
- https://doi.org/10.1197/j.aem.2003.11.017
Abstract
The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) Practice-Based Learning and Improvement competency incorporates lifelong learning techniques and self-reflection. Resident portfolios have received attention as a useful method for addressing this competency. A recent patient encounter provided an experienced clinical educator with the opportunity to develop a portfolio entry that was distributed to all of the residents and faculty in an emergency medicine residency. This report may assist educators in explaining how one could approach the development of the portfolio as a tool for self-assessment. A candid discussion by a senior faculty member about issues that contributed to medical error has been underreported in the medical literature.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Errors in a busy emergency departmentAnnals of Emergency Medicine, 2003
- Patient Safety: A Curriculum for Teaching Patient Safety in Emergency MedicineAcademic Emergency Medicine, 2003
- Patient Safety: A Curriculum for Teaching Patient Safety in Emergency MedicineAcademic Emergency Medicine, 2003
- Definitions and Competencies for Practice-based Learning and ImprovementAcademic Emergency Medicine, 2002
- Achieving Quality in Clinical Decision Making: Cognitive Strategies and Detection of BiasAcademic Emergency Medicine, 2002
- Portfolios: Possibilities for Addressing Emergency Medicine Resident CompetenciesAcademic Emergency Medicine, 2002
- Portfolios: Possibilities for Addressing Emergency Medicine Resident CompetenciesAcademic Emergency Medicine, 2002
- Definitions and Competencies for Practice‐based Learning and ImprovementAcademic Emergency Medicine, 2002
- Achieving Quality in Clinical Decision Making: Cognitive Strategies and Detection of BiasAcademic Emergency Medicine, 2002
- Physicians' cognitive errors and their liability consequencesJournal of Healthcare Risk Management, 1998