Department of Emergency Medicine, Queen's University, Kingston, ON.
CJEM. 2012 May;14(3):139-46. doi: 10.2310/8000.2012.110385.
We sought to develop and validate a three-station simulation-based Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) tool to assess emergency medicine resident competency in resuscitation scenarios.
An expert panel of emergency physicians developed three scenarios for use with high-fidelity mannequins. For each scenario, a corresponding assessment tool was developed with an essential actions (EA) checklist and a global assessment score (GAS). The scenarios were (1) unstable ventricular tachycardia, (2) respiratory failure, and (3) ST elevation myocardial infarction. Emergency medicine residents were videotaped completing the OSCE, and three clinician experts independently evaluated the videotapes using the assessment tool.
Twenty-one residents completed the OSCE (nine residents in the College of Family Physicians of Canada-Emergency Medicine [CCFP-EM] program, six junior residents in the Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Canada-Emergency Medicine [FRCP-EM] program, six senior residents in the FRCP-EM). Interrater reliability for the EA scores was good but varied between scenarios (Spearman rho = [1] 0.68, [2] 0.81, [3] 0.41). Interrater reliability for the GAS was also good, with less variability (rho = [1] 0.64, [2] 0.56, [3] 0.62). When comparing GAS scores, senior FRCP residents outperformed CCFP-EM residents in all scenarios and junior residents in two of three scenarios (p < 0.001 to 0.01). Based on EA scores, senior FRCP residents outperformed CCFP-EM residents, but junior residents outperformed senior FRCP residents in scenario 1 and CCFP-EM residents in all scenarios (p = 0.006 to 0.04).
This study outlines the creation of a high-fidelity simulation assessment tool for trainees in emergency medicine. A single-point GAS demonstrated stronger relational validity and more consistent reliability in comparison with an EA checklist. This preliminary work will provide a foundation for ongoing future development of simulation-based assessment tools.
我们旨在开发和验证一种基于三站模拟的客观结构化临床考试(OSCE)工具,以评估急诊住院医师在复苏场景中的能力。
一组急诊医师专家开发了三个高保真模拟人使用的场景。对于每个场景,都开发了相应的评估工具,包括基本操作(EA)检查表和总体评估分数(GAS)。这些场景包括(1)不稳定型室性心动过速,(2)呼吸衰竭和(3)ST 段抬高型心肌梗死。急诊住院医师完成 OSCE 后进行录像,三位临床专家使用评估工具独立评估录像。
21 名住院医师完成了 OSCE(加拿大家庭医生学院-急诊医学项目 [CCFP-EM] 的 9 名住院医师、加拿大皇家内科学院-急诊医学项目 [FRCP-EM] 的 6 名初级住院医师、FRCP-EM 的 6 名高级住院医师)。EA 分数的组内信度良好,但在不同场景之间存在差异(Spearman rho = [1] 0.68、[2] 0.81、[3] 0.41)。GAS 的组内信度也很好,变异较小(rho = [1] 0.64、[2] 0.56、[3] 0.62)。在比较 GAS 分数时,高级 FRCP 住院医师在所有场景中均优于 CCFP-EM 住院医师,在三个场景中的两个场景中均优于初级住院医师(p < 0.001 至 0.01)。根据 EA 分数,高级 FRCP 住院医师优于 CCFP-EM 住院医师,但初级住院医师在场景 1 中优于高级 FRCP 住院医师,在所有场景中均优于 CCFP-EM 住院医师(p = 0.006 至 0.04)。
本研究概述了为急诊医学住院医师开发的高保真模拟评估工具。与 EA 检查表相比,单点 GAS 显示出更强的相关性有效性和更一致的可靠性。这项初步工作将为正在进行的基于模拟的评估工具的开发提供基础。