Sargeant Joan, Mann Karen, Sinclair Douglas, van der Vleuten Cees, Metsemakers Job
Department of Continuing Medical Education, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
Med Educ. 2007 Jun;41(6):583-91. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2923.2007.02769.x.
Multisource feedback (MSF) is a type of formative assessment intended to guide learning and performance change. However, in earlier research, some doctors questioned its validity and did not use it for improvement, raising questions about its consequential validity (i.e. its ability to produce intended outcomes related to learning and change). The purpose of this qualitative study was to increase understanding of the consequential validity of MSF by exploring how doctors used their feedback and the conditions influencing this use.
We used interviews with open-ended questions. We purposefully recruited volunteer participants from 2 groups of family doctors who participated in a pilot assessment of MSF: those who received high (n = 25) and those who received average/lower (n = 44) scores.
Respondents included 12 in the higher- and 16 in the average/lower-scoring groups. Fifteen interpreted their feedback as positive (i.e. confirming current practice) and did not make changes. Thirteen interpreted feedback as negative in 1 or more domains (i.e. not confirming their practice and indicating need for change). Seven reported making changes. The most common changes were in patient and team communication; the least common were in clinical competence. Positive influences upon change included receiving specific feedback consistent with other sources of feedback from credible reviewers who were able to observe the subjects. These reviewers were most frequently patients.
Findings suggest circumstances that may contribute to low consequential validity of MSF for doctors. Implications for practice include enhancing procedural credibility by ensuring reviewers' ability to observe respective behaviours, enhancing feedback usefulness by increasing its specificity, and considering the use of more objective measures of clinical competence.
多源反馈(MSF)是一种旨在指导学习和绩效改进的形成性评估。然而,在早期研究中,一些医生质疑其有效性,并未将其用于改进,这引发了对其结果效度(即其产生与学习和改变相关的预期结果的能力)的质疑。这项定性研究的目的是通过探究医生如何利用他们收到的反馈以及影响这种利用的条件,来增进对MSF结果效度的理解。
我们采用了开放式问题访谈。我们有目的地从两组参与MSF试点评估的家庭医生中招募志愿者参与者:得分高的一组(n = 25)和得分中等/较低的一组(n = 44)。
受访者包括高分值组中的12人以及中等/低分值组中的16人。15人将他们收到的反馈解读为积极的(即确认当前的做法),并未做出改变。13人在一个或多个领域将反馈解读为消极的(即不确认他们的做法并表明需要改变)。7人报告做出了改变。最常见的改变是在患者和团队沟通方面;最不常见的是在临床能力方面。对改变的积极影响包括收到与来自可信评审者的其他反馈来源一致的具体反馈,这些评审者能够观察受试者。这些评审者最常见的是患者。
研究结果表明了可能导致MSF对医生的结果效度较低的情况。对实践的启示包括通过确保评审者观察各自行为的能力来提高程序可信度,通过提高反馈的具体性来增强反馈的有用性,以及考虑使用更客观的临床能力衡量方法。