Title |
Disease Vocabulary Size as a Surrogate Marker for Physicians' Disease Knowledge Volume.
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Creator |
Tanaka Hiroaki
Ueda Kazuhiro
Watanuki Satoshi
Tokuda Yasuharu
Okumura Takashi
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Source Title |
PLOS ONE
|
Volume | 13 |
Issue | 12 |
Start Page | e0209551 |
Journal Identifire |
ISSN 1932-6203
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Descriptions |
Objective
Recognizing what physicians know and do not know about a particular disease is one of the keys to designing clinical decision support systems, since these systems can fulfill complementary role by recognizing this boundary. To our knowledge, however, no study has attempted to quantify how many diseases physicians actually know and thus the boundary is unclear. This study explores a method to solve this problem by investigating whether the vocabulary assessment techniques developed in the linguistics field can be applied to assess physicians’ knowledge. Methods The test design required us to pay special attention to disease knowledge assessment. First, to avoid imposing unnecessary burdens on the physicians, we chose a self-assessment questionnaire that was straightforward to fill out. Second, to prevent overestimation, we used a “pseudo-word” approach: fictitious diseases were included in the questionnaire, and positive responses to them were penalized. Third, we used paper-based tests, rather than computer-based ones, to further prevent participants from cheating by using a search engine. Fourth, we selectively used borderline diseases, i.e., diseases that physicians might or might not know about, rather than well-known or little-known diseases, in the questionnaire. Results We collected 102 valid answers from 109 physicians who attended the seminars we conducted. On the basis of these answers, we estimated that the average physician knew of 2008 diseases (95% confidence interval: (1939, 2071)). This preliminary estimation agrees with the guideline for the national license examination in Japan, suggesting that this vocabulary assessment was able to evaluate physicians’ knowledge. The survey included physicians with various backgrounds, but there were no significant differences between subgroups. Other implication for researches on clinical decision support and limitation of the sampling method adopted in this study are also discussed, toward more rigorous estimation in future surveys. |
Language |
eng
|
Resource Type | journal article |
Publisher |
Public Library of Science
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Date of Issued | 2018-12-27 |
Access Rights | metadata only access |
Relation |
[DOI] 10.1371/journal.pone.0209551
[URI] http://www.plosone.org/
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