Battistone Michael J, Barker Andrea M, Beck J Peter, Tashjian Robert Z, Cannon Grant W
Salt Lake City Veterans Affairs Medical Center (SLC VAMC), 500 Foothill Drive, Salt Lake City, UT, 84148, USA.
Department of Medicine, Division of Rheumatology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, USA.
BMC Med Educ. 2017 Jan 13;17(1):13. doi: 10.1186/s12909-016-0850-7.
We developed two objective structured clinical examinations (OSCEs) to educate and evaluate trainees in the evaluation and management of shoulder and knee pain. Our objective was to examine the evidence for validity of these OSCEs.
A multidisciplinary team of content experts developed checklists of exam maneuvers and criteria to guide rater observations. Content was proposed by faculty, supplemented by literature review, and finalized using a Delphi process. One faculty simulated the patient, another rated examinee performance. Two faculty independently rated a portion of cases. Percent agreement was calculated and Cohen's kappa corrected for chance agreement on binary outcomes. Examinees' self-assessment was explored by written surveys. Responses were stratified into 3 categories and compared with similarly stratified OSCE scores using Pearson's coefficient.
A multi-disciplinary cohort of 69 examinees participated. Examinees correctly identified rotator cuff and meniscal disease 88% and 89% of the time, respectively. Inter-rater agreement was moderate for the knee (87%; k = 0.61) and near perfect for the shoulder (97%; k = 0.88). No correlation between stratified self-assessment and OSCE scores were found for either shoulder (0.02) or knee (-0.07).
Validity evidence supports the continuing use of these OSCEs in educational programs addressing the evaluation and management of shoulder and knee pain. Evidence for validity includes the systematic development of content, rigorous control of the response process, and demonstration of acceptable interrater agreement. Lack of correlation with self-assessment suggests that these OSCEs measure a construct different from learners' self-confidence.
我们开发了两项客观结构化临床考试(OSCE),用于教育和评估学员对肩痛和膝痛的评估与管理能力。我们的目的是检验这些OSCE有效性的证据。
一个由内容专家组成的多学科团队制定了检查操作和标准清单,以指导评分者进行观察。内容由教员提出,经文献综述补充,并通过德尔菲法最终确定。一名教员模拟患者,另一名教员对考生表现进行评分。两名教员独立对部分病例进行评分。计算百分比一致性,并对二元结果的机遇一致性进行科恩kappa校正。通过书面调查探讨考生的自我评估。回答被分为3类,并使用皮尔逊系数与分层后的OSCE分数进行比较。
69名考生组成的多学科队列参与了研究。考生分别在88%和89%的时间内正确识别出肩袖损伤和半月板疾病。膝关节的评分者间一致性为中等(87%;k = 0.61),肩关节的评分者间一致性接近完美(97%;k = 0.88)。在肩关节(0.02)或膝关节(-0.07)的分层自我评估与OSCE分数之间均未发现相关性。
有效性证据支持在涉及肩痛和膝痛评估与管理的教育项目中继续使用这些OSCE。有效性证据包括内容的系统开发、对反应过程的严格控制以及可接受的评分者间一致性的证明。与自我评估缺乏相关性表明,这些OSCE测量的结构与学习者的自信心不同。