Here's an example of what's due today

Diagnostic disclosure debate

Fri, Nov 6, 2026 · Week 11 · Principles of Biomedical Technology (Principles of Biomedical Science)

Today's goal: Students debate how much diagnostic uncertainty a clinician should share with a new patient.

Learn first

What a finished product looks like

This is a model of the work you should turn in today. Use it to check your own: match the structure and the level of detail, do not copy it. Your data and wording should be your own.

Worked CER on a parallel case (incidental-finding disclosure), modeling the format only
Completes: A one-sentence written summary of the most persuasive counterpoint the student heard in the diagnostic-disclosure debate.

Parallel case (not today's prompt): A clinician orders an abdominal CT scan to check for kidney stones. The stones are ruled out, but the scan happens to reveal a small, harmless-looking spot on the patient's liver that was not what anyone was looking for. This is called an incidental finding. Should the clinician tell the patient about the unrelated spot, or leave it out of the report because it was not the reason for the scan?\n\nClaim: The clinician should disclose the incidental liver finding to the patient rather than leave it unmentioned.\n\nEvidence: Radiology guidelines classify many incidental findings on a scale from benign to concerning, and a spot that looks harmless can still fall into a category that professional guidelines recommend tracking with a short follow-up scan. The finding is now part of the patient's medical record, which the patient has a legal right to access. In addition, a later, unrelated appointment could surface the same spot with no context, which tends to alarm patients more than a calm explanation given up front.\n\nReasoning: The evidence supports disclosure because the principle of informed consent means a patient is entitled to material facts about their own body, and a documented finding with a recommended follow-up is material even when it is probably benign. Withholding it would trade the patient's autonomy for the clinician's convenience, while disclosing it respects shared decision-making: the clinician explains what the finding likely is, names the small chance it is something more, and lets the patient help decide whether to do the low-cost follow-up scan. Framed that way, honesty and patient partnership outweigh the mild worry a benign spot might cause.\n\n(Vocabulary used: incidental finding, informed consent, shared decision-making.)

Also due today: Hand in the exit-ticket card, or submit in Schoology under today's exit-ticket assignment.

Check yourself

WebXam problem for today's skill

One exam-style question that uses exactly what you practiced today. Try it before you reveal the answer, then read why each choice is right or wrong.

WebXam-style domain: Biotechnology Research and ExperimentsSelf-check skill: Defining differential diagnosis and shared decision-making
A clinician lists three possible conditions for a patient's symptoms, ranked from most to least likely. What is this list called?

Tap an answer to see the full explanation. Nothing is recorded or graded.