Roberts Laura Weiss, Geppert Cynthia, McCarty Teresita, Obenshain S Scott
Empirical Ethics Group, Department of Psychiatry, University of New Mexico School of Medicine, Albuquerque, NM 87131-5326, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2003 Feb;18(2):112-9. doi: 10.1046/j.1525-1497.2003.10835.x.
To evaluate fourth-year medical students' abilities to obtain informed consent or refusal for HIV testing through a performance-based evaluation method.
Student competence was assessed in a standardized patient interaction in which the student obtained informed consent or refusal for HIV testing. A previously validated 16-item checklist was completed by the standardized patient. A subset was independently reviewed and scored by a faculty member to calculate interrater reliability for this report. Student feedback on the assessment was elicited.
School of Medicine at the University of New Mexico.
PATIENTS/PARTICIPANTS: All senior medical students in the class of 2000 were included.
A 10-minute standardized patient interaction was administered within the context of a formal comprehensive performance assessment.
Seventy-nine students participated, and most (96%) demonstrated competence on the station. For the 15 specific items, the mean score was 25.5 out of 30 possible points (range, 13 to 30; SD, 3.5) on the checklist. A strong positive correlation (rs =.79) was found between the total score on the 15 Likert-scaled items and the score in response to the global item, "I would return to this clinician" (mean, 3.5; SD, 1.0). Scores given by the standardized patients and the faculty rater were well correlated. The station was generally well received by students, many of whom were stimulated to pursue further learning.
This method of assessing medical students' abilities to obtain informed consent or refusal for HIV testing can be translated to a variety of clinical settings. Such efforts may help in demonstrating competence in performing key ethics skills and may help ensure ethically sound clinical care for people at risk for HIV infection.
通过基于表现的评估方法,评估四年级医学生获取HIV检测知情同意或拒绝的能力。
在标准化病人互动中评估学生能力,学生需获取HIV检测的知情同意或拒绝。标准化病人完成一份先前验证过的包含16项内容的清单。由一名教员独立审查并评分一个子集,以计算本报告的评分者间信度。收集学生对评估的反馈。
新墨西哥大学医学院。
患者/参与者:纳入了2000级所有高年级医学生。
在正式的综合表现评估背景下进行10分钟的标准化病人互动。
79名学生参与,大多数(96%)在该环节表现出能力。对于15项具体内容,清单上的平均得分是30分中的25.5分(范围为13至30分;标准差为3.5)。在15项李克特量表项目的总分与对总体项目“我会再次找这位临床医生”的回答得分(平均分为3.5;标准差为1.0)之间发现了强正相关(rs = 0.79)。标准化病人和教员评分者给出的分数相关性良好。该环节总体上受到学生好评,许多学生因此受到激励去进一步学习。
这种评估医学生获取HIV检测知情同意或拒绝能力的方法可应用于多种临床环境。此类努力可能有助于证明在执行关键伦理技能方面的能力,并可能有助于确保为HIV感染风险人群提供符合伦理的临床护理。