Lunz Mary E, Bashook Philip G
Department of Psychometrics, Measurement Research Associates, Inc., Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Med Educ. 2008 Dec;42(12):1227-33. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2923.2008.03231.x.
Structured case-based oral examinations are widely used in medical certifying examinations in the USA. These orals assess the candidate's decision-making skills using real or realistic patient cases. Frequently mentioned but not empirically evaluated is the potential bias introduced by the candidate's communication ability.
This study aimed to assess the relationship between candidate communication ability and medical certification oral examination scores.
Non-doctor communication observers rated a random sample of 90 candidates on communication ability during a medical oral certification examination. The multi-facet Rasch model was used to analyse the communication survey and the oral examination data. The multi-facet model accounts for observer and examiner severity bias. anova was used to measure differences in communication ability between passing and failing candidates and candidates grouped by level of communication ability. Pearson's correlations were used to compare candidate communication ability and oral certification examination performance.
Candidate separation reliability values for the communication survey and the oral examination were 0.85 and 0.97, respectively, suggesting accurate candidate measurement. The correlation between communication scores and oral examination scores was 0.10. No significant difference was found between passing and failing candidates for measured communication ability. When candidates were grouped by high, moderate and low communication ability, there was no significant difference in their oral certification examination performance.
Candidates' communication ability has little relationship to candidate performance on high-stakes, case-based oral examinations. Examiners for this certifying examination focused on assessing candidate decision-making ability and were not influenced by candidate communication ability.
在美国,基于案例的结构化口试广泛应用于医学认证考试。这些口试使用真实或逼真的患者案例来评估考生的决策能力。考生的沟通能力所带来的潜在偏差虽常被提及,但未经实证评估。
本研究旨在评估考生沟通能力与医学认证口试成绩之间的关系。
非医生沟通观察员在医学口试认证考试期间,对90名考生的沟通能力进行随机评分。采用多面Rasch模型分析沟通调查和口试数据。多面模型考虑了观察员和考官的评分偏差。方差分析用于测量通过和未通过的考生以及按沟通能力水平分组的考生之间在沟通能力上的差异。皮尔逊相关性用于比较考生的沟通能力和口试认证考试成绩。
沟通调查和口试的考生区分可靠性值分别为0.85和0.97,表明对考生的测量准确。沟通分数与口试分数之间的相关性为0.10。在测量的沟通能力方面,通过和未通过的考生之间没有显著差异。当考生按高、中、低沟通能力分组时,他们的口试认证考试成绩没有显著差异。
考生的沟通能力与高风险、基于案例的口试中的考生表现关系不大。该认证考试的考官侧重于评估考生的决策能力,不受考生沟通能力的影响。