A1 The tennis court was the practice field. It offered a space to learn and make mistakes in a consequence free environment. (Kind of A2) By doing so, when it came time for pilot run, the staff would already have worked through the many of the problems. #solvechat@projsolve
@RJmdphilly@projsolve This reminded me of interviewing standardized patients in front of classmates during first year. It was a low stakes environment that offered a great arena for mistakes and corrections without impacting the final product (patient care). #solvechat
Q4: Observing how other fields (both within and outside of medicine) approach similar problems can help push physicians to think outside the box, particularly when an approach or belief is rooted in tradition over evidenced based reasoning. #SolveCHAT
A1: Innovative research is the perfect opportunity for physicians to take the “yes and” approach in order to dig deeper into topics for which others have begun the lay the foundation. #SolveCHAT@projsolve
@anandgopalmd As residents, we rarely know how to maximize cost effectiveness for patients. I have done several clinic follow ups where patients were unable to pick up a medication after discharge because of the cost.
@dilrucheryl@CaizenEye I think this is only exacerbated by the fact that patients often don't even know why they are seeing a new provider so it often takes a good amount of time to figure out what your role is in the interdisciplinary team.
I think in medicine we assume those who came before us did something for a specific/logical reason and (too often) continue with the status quo because it’s assumed to be the best approach instead of “reinventing the telephone” #solvechat
A1. I’m most creative when forced outside my comfort zone (be it in a different country, new school/job, meeting new people, etc). Forces me to rethink an approach or philosophy, take a step back, question why, and rethink what I am doing. #solvechat