Schumacher Daniel J, King Beth, Barnes Michelle M, Elliott Sean P, Gibbs Kathleen, McGreevy Jon F, Del Rey Javier Gonzalez, Sharma Tanvi, Michelson Catherine, Schwartz Alan
J Grad Med Educ. 2018 Aug;10(4):429-437. doi: 10.4300/JGME-D-17-00762.1.
Clinical Competency Committees (CCCs) are charged with making summative assessment decisions about residents.
We explored how review processes CCC members utilize influence their decisions regarding residents' milestone levels and supervisory roles.
We conducted a multisite longitudinal prospective observational cohort study at 14 pediatrics residency programs during academic year 2015-2016. Individual CCC members biannually reported characteristics of their review process and Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education milestone levels and recommended supervisory role categorizations assigned to residents. Relationships among characteristics of CCC member reviews, mean milestone levels, and supervisory role categorizations were analyzed using mixed-effects linear regression, reported as mean differences with 95% confidence intervals (CIs), and Bayesian mixed-effects ordinal regression, reported as odds ratios (ORs) and 95% credible intervals (CrIs).
A total of 155 CCC members participated. Members who provided milestones or other professional development feedback after CCC meetings assigned significantly lower mean milestone levels (mean 1.4 points; CI -2.2 to -0.6; < .001) and were significantly less likely to recommend supervisory responsibility in any setting (OR = 0.23, CrI 0.05-0.83) compared with CCC members who did not. Members recommended less supervisory responsibility when they reviewed more residents (OR = 0.96, 95% CrI 0.94-0.99) and participated in more review cycles (OR = 0.22, 95% CrI 0.07-0.63).
This study explored the association between characteristics of individual CCC member reviews and their summative assessment decisions about residents. Further study is needed to gain deeper understanding of factors influencing CCC members' summative assessment decisions.
临床能力委员会(CCC)负责对住院医师做出总结性评估决定。
我们探讨了CCC成员所采用的评审流程如何影响他们对住院医师的里程碑水平和监督角色的决策。
在2015 - 2016学年,我们对14个儿科住院医师培训项目进行了多地点纵向前瞻性观察队列研究。CCC成员个人每半年报告一次他们的评审流程特点、毕业后医学教育认证委员会的里程碑水平,以及分配给住院医师的推荐监督角色分类。使用混合效应线性回归分析CCC成员评审特征、平均里程碑水平和监督角色分类之间的关系,结果以95%置信区间(CI)的平均差异表示;使用贝叶斯混合效应有序回归分析,结果以优势比(OR)和95%可信区间(CrI)表示。
共有155名CCC成员参与。与未在CCC会议后提供里程碑或其他专业发展反馈的成员相比,在CCC会议后提供此类反馈的成员所分配的平均里程碑水平显著更低(平均低1.4分;CI -2.2至 -0.6;P <.001),并且在任何情况下推荐监督职责的可能性都显著更低(OR = 0.23,CrI 0.05 - 0.83)。当成员评审的住院医师更多时(OR = 0.96,95% CrI 0.94 - 0.99)以及参与的评审周期更多时(OR = 0.22,95% CrI 0.07 - 0.63),他们推荐的监督职责更少。
本研究探讨了CCC成员个人评审特征与其对住院医师的总结性评估决定之间的关联。需要进一步研究以更深入地了解影响CCC成员总结性评估决定的因素。