Strategies for Teaching Uncertainty Tolerance in Medical Education: A Qualitative Study
Journal
JACEP Open
ISSN
2688-1152
Date Issued
2026-02
Author(s)
Rebekah Cole
Elizabeth Pearce
Sadie Kenny
Amy F. Hildreth
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.acepjo.2025.100298
Abstract
Objectives: To examine how experienced healthcare educators conceptualize and teach uncertainty tolerance and identify strategies to inform medical education curricula for complex, unpredictable clinical environments. Methods: We conducted a qualitative phenomenological study with 15 healthcare educators during a multiday, high-fidelity prehospital simulation at a United States military-affiliated medical training facility. Participants completed semistructured interviews, a demographic questionnaire, and the Intolerance of Uncertainty Scale–Short Form. Interviews were transcribed and analyzed using iterative coding and constant comparison to identify themes grounded in participants’ lived experiences. This study was reported in accordance with the Standards for Reporting Qualitative Research guidelines. Results: Four themes emerged: (1) confidence through exposure—early, repeated, realistic practice fosters automatic responses under pressure; (2) safety fosters engagement—psychological safety, supportive leadership, and diversity of thought encourage active engagement with uncertainty; (3) growth through insight—structured reflection, constructive feedback, and learning from mistakes promote development; and (4) navigating ambiguity with flexible thinking—cognitive flexibility, probabilistic reasoning, and philosophical reframing support decision-making without paralysis. Conclusion: Uncertainty tolerance is a teachable, multifaceted competency. Curricular strategies should include early and repeated exposure, psychologically safe learning environments, structured reflection, and training in flexible thinking. Integrating these elements, particularly in high-stakes specialties like emergency medicine, may improve clinical reasoning, patient care, and clinician
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