D.J. Schumacher is associate professor, Department of Pediatrics, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center and University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio. A. Martini is clinical research coordinator, Division of Emergency Medicine, Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, Ohio. K.W. Bartlett is associate professor and associate program director, Department of Pediatrics, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina. B. King is research project manager, Association of Pediatric Program Directors Longitudinal Educational Assessment Research Network, McLean, Virginia. S. Calaman is associate professor and pediatric program director, Department of Pediatrics, Drexel University College of Medicine and St. Christopher's Hospital for Children, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. L.C. Garfunkel is professor and associate program director, Department of Pediatrics, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, New York. S.P. Elliott is professor, associate chair, and program director, Department of Pediatrics, and interim associate dean, University of Arizona College of Medicine, Tucson, Arizona. J.G. Frohna is professor, Departments of Pediatrics and Internal Medicine, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, Wisconsin. A. Schwartz is Michael Reese Endowed Professor of Medical Education and associate head, Department of Medical Education, and research professor, Department of Pediatrics, University of Illinois College of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, and director, Association of Pediatric Program Directors Longitudinal Educational Assessment Research Network, McLean, Virginia. C.D. Michelson is assistant professor and pediatric program director, Department of Pediatrics, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts.
Acad Med. 2019 Feb;94(2):251-258. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000002469.
Entrustment has become a popular assessment framework in recent years. Most research in this area has focused on how frontline assessors determine when a learner can be entrusted. However, less work has focused on how these entrustment decisions are made. The authors sought to understand the key factors that pediatric residency program clinical competency committee (CCC) members consider when recommending residents to a supervisory role.
CCC members at 14 pediatric residency programs recommended residents to one of five progressive supervisory roles (from not serving as a supervisory resident to serving as a supervisory resident in all settings). They then responded to a free-text prompt, describing the key factors that led them to that decision. The authors analyzed these responses, by role recommendation, using a thematic analysis.
Of the 155 CCC members at the participating programs, 84 completed 769 supervisory role recommendations during the 2015-2016 academic year. Four themes emerged from the thematic analysis: (1) Determining supervisory ability follows from demonstrated trustworthiness; (2) demonstrated performance matters, but so does experience; (3) ability to lead a team is considered; and (4) contextual considerations external to the resident are at play.
CCC members considered resident and environmental factors in their summative entrustment decision making. The interplay between these factors should be considered as CCC processes are optimized and studied further.
委托已成为近年来流行的评估框架。该领域的大多数研究都集中在一线评估者如何确定学习者何时可以被委托。然而,较少的工作集中在如何做出这些委托决策。作者试图了解儿科住院医师培训计划临床能力委员会(CCC)成员在推荐住院医师担任监督角色时考虑的关键因素。
14 个儿科住院医师培训计划的 CCC 成员推荐住院医师担任五个渐进式监督角色之一(从不担任监督住院医师到在所有环境中担任监督住院医师)。然后,他们对一个自由文本提示做出回应,描述导致他们做出该决定的关键因素。作者通过角色推荐,使用主题分析对这些回复进行了分析。
在参与计划的 155 名 CCC 成员中,有 84 名在 2015-2016 学年期间完成了 769 项监督角色推荐。主题分析中出现了四个主题:(1)从可信赖性推断出监督能力;(2)表现固然重要,但经验也很重要;(3)考虑领导团队的能力;(4)考虑到居民以外的环境因素。
CCC 成员在他们的总结性委托决策中考虑了居民和环境因素。在优化和进一步研究 CCC 流程时,应考虑这些因素之间的相互作用。