Castanelli Damian J, Jowsey Tanisha, Chen Yan, Weller Jennifer M
Department of Anaesthesia and Perioperative Medicine, Monash Medical Centre, 246 Clayton Road Clayton, Melbourne, VIC, 3168, Australia.
Department of Anaesthesia and Perioperative Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Can J Anaesth. 2016 Dec;63(12):1345-1356. doi: 10.1007/s12630-016-0740-9. Epub 2016 Sep 23.
Workplace-based assessment is integral to programmatic assessment in a competency-based curriculum. In 2013, one such assessment, a mini-Clinical Evaluation Exercise (mini-CEX) with a novel "entrustability scale", became compulsory for over 1,200 Australia and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists (ANZCA) trainees. We explored trainees' and supervisors' understanding of the mini-CEX, their experience with the assessment, and their perceptions of its influence on learning and supervision.
We conducted semi-structured telephone interviews with anesthesia supervisors and trainees and performed an inductive thematic analysis of the verbatim transcripts.
Eighteen supervisors and 17 trainees participated (n = 35). Interrelated themes concerned the perceived purpose of the mini-CEX, its value in trainee learning and supervision, and the process of performing the assessment. While few participants saw the mini-CEX primarily as an administrative burden, most focused on its potential for facilitating trainee improvement and reported positive impacts on the quantity and quality of feedback, trainee learning, and supervision. Finding time to schedule assessments and deliver timely feedback proved to be difficult in busy clinical workplaces. Views on case selection were divided and driven by contrasting goals - i.e., receiving useful feedback on challenging cases or receiving a high score by choosing lenient assessors or easy cases. Whether individual mini-CEXs were summative or formative was subject to intense debate, while the intended summative use of multiple mini-CEXs in programmatic assessment was poorly understood.
Greater clarity of purpose and consistency of time commitment are necessary to embed the mini-CEX in the culture of the workplace, to realize the full potential for trainee learning, and to reach decisions on trainee progression.
基于工作场所的评估是基于能力的课程中程序化评估的重要组成部分。2013年,一项此类评估,即带有新型“可托付性量表”的小型临床评估练习(mini-CEX),成为1200多名澳大利亚和新西兰麻醉师学院(ANZCA)学员的必修课。我们探讨了学员和督导对mini-CEX的理解、他们的评估体验,以及他们对其对学习和督导影响的看法。
我们对麻醉督导和学员进行了半结构化电话访谈,并对逐字记录进行了归纳主题分析。
18名督导和17名学员参与(n = 35)。相互关联的主题涉及mini-CEX的感知目的、其在学员学习和督导中的价值,以及进行评估的过程。虽然很少有参与者主要将mini-CEX视为行政负担,但大多数人关注其促进学员进步的潜力,并报告了对反馈的数量和质量、学员学习和督导的积极影响。在繁忙的临床工作场所,很难找到时间安排评估并及时提供反馈。对病例选择的看法存在分歧,且受不同目标驱动——即从具有挑战性的病例中获得有用反馈,或通过选择宽松的评估者或简单的病例获得高分。个别mini-CEX是总结性还是形成性存在激烈争论,而在程序化评估中多个mini-CEX预期的总结性用途则理解不足。
为了将mini-CEX融入工作场所文化、充分发挥学员学习潜力并就学员进展做出决策,需要更明确的目的和时间投入的一致性。