Interview |
The student asks relevant and sufficient questions that reflect a logical order |
The student asks some relevant and necessary questions although he/she does not follow a structured order |
The student has problems with structuring relevant questions in the interview |
Physical Exam |
The student looks for signs in the patient and justifies such search |
The student performs an incomplete physical exam or does it in a unstructured manner; does not properly recognize the case’s relevant findings |
The student has no ideas on what to look for in the patient’s physical exam |
Medical reasoning |
The student correlates findings from the physical exam with those from the interview to approach a diagnosis |
The student properly correlates some findings of the physical exam with those from the interview, or the student approaches the diagnosis, although he/she does not establish a relation that is consistent with the patient’s signs and symptoms |
The student does not evidence the ability to correlate the findings from the physical exam and the interview to approach a diagnosis |
Relevance of Additional Exams |
The student proposes relevant strategies to acquire additional data that contribute to pinpointing the diagnosis |
The student proposes some strategies that are somewhat irrelevant for the acquisition of additional data that contribute to approaching a diagnosis |
The student does not propose strategies to a diagnostic approach |
Presentation of case |
The student presents the clinical case in a logical order and considers all the relevant information |
The student presents the clinical case in a slightly unstructured manner, tries to achieve a logical order but fails to do so. Presents both relevant and irrelevant information |
The student omits relevant information and does not present the clinical case coherently |