Leslie Dan Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Med Educ. 2017 Apr;51(4):379-389. doi: 10.1111/medu.13222. Epub 2017 Jan 24.
Predictive validity studies on the use of the multiple mini-interview (MMI) have been primarily in medicine.
This study sought to determine the predictive validity of the MMI for performance within a pharmacy programme and on the Pharmacy Examining Board of Canada (PEBC) Qualifying Examination for licensure, and to compare the predictive validity of the MMI with that of pre-pharmacy grade point average (GPA) and Pharmacy College Admission Test (PCAT) score.
Admissions data for 223 graduates of the pharmacy programme at the University of Toronto were matched to programme and licensure outcome measures. Multiple linear regression assessed the predictive ability of the MMI, pre-pharmacy GPA, PCAT and covariates for performance in final-year experiential rotations, cumulative GPA (cGPA) and PEBC-MCQ (multiple-choice question examination) and PEBC-OSCE (objective structured clinical examination) overall and subcomponent scores.
The PCAT, pre-pharmacy GPA and age significantly predicted the PEBC-MCQ overall score. The MMI was the only significant predictor of overall score on the PEBC-OSCE (β = 0.17, p = 0.02); it also predicted communication and performance subscores. Scores on the PCAT and female gender predicted the communication subscore. Pre-pharmacy GPA, age and female gender significantly predicted cGPA. The MMI was the only significant predictor of institutional/ambulatory rotation score (β = 0.26, p = 0.00).
The MMI, designed to measure non-academic attributes including communication, motivation and problem-solving skills, was the only admissions tool with significant predictive validity for performance on the PEBC-OSCE national pharmacy certification examination and in an institutional/ambulatory rotation. These findings, from a single cohort of undergraduates, provide the first report of the predictive validity of the MMI for performance on pharmacy licensure examinations and thereby strengthen the evidence for its use in health professions selection. Prior university academic performance significantly predicted cGPA and performance on the PEBC-MCQ. Performance on the PCAT also predicted PEBC-MCQ results.
多项迷你面试(MMI)的预测有效性研究主要集中在医学领域。
本研究旨在确定 MMI 对药剂学课程表现和加拿大药剂师考试委员会(PEBC)许可考试成绩的预测有效性,并比较 MMI 与药学前绩点(GPA)和药学入学考试(PCAT)成绩的预测有效性。
将多伦多大学药学课程 223 名毕业生的入学数据与课程和许可结果衡量标准相匹配。多元线性回归评估了 MMI、药学前 GPA、PCAT 和协变量对最后一年实习成绩、累积 GPA(cGPA)、PEBC-MCQ(多项选择题考试)和 PEBC-OSCE(客观结构化临床考试)整体和子组件成绩的预测能力。
PCAT、药学前 GPA 和年龄显著预测了 PEBC-MCQ 总分。MMI 是唯一显著预测 PEBC-OSCE 总分的因素(β=0.17,p=0.02);它还预测了沟通和表现子分数。PCAT 分数和女性性别预测了沟通子分数。药学前 GPA、年龄和女性性别显著预测了 cGPA。MMI 是机构/门诊轮转成绩的唯一显著预测因素(β=0.26,p=0.00)。
MMI 旨在衡量沟通、动机和解决问题能力等非学术属性,是唯一具有预测性的招生工具,可预测 PEBC-OSCE 国家药剂师认证考试和机构/门诊轮转中的表现。这些来自单一本科生队列的发现,首次报告了 MMI 对药剂学许可考试成绩的预测有效性,从而为其在医疗保健专业人员选拔中的应用提供了更多证据。先前的大学学业成绩显著预测了 cGPA 和 PEBC-MCQ 成绩。PCAT 成绩也预测了 PEBC-MCQ 的结果。