Paul Caroline R, Keeley Meg G, Rebella Gregory, Frohna John G
Assistant Professor (CHS), Department of Pediatrics, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health.
Professor, Department of Pediatrics, University of Virginia School of Medicine.
MedEdPORTAL. 2016 Aug 5;12:10432. doi: 10.15766/mep_2374-8265.10432.
Acute otitis media (AOM) is the most frequently diagnosed pediatric illness in the United States and the most common indication for antibiotic prescription. Skill in pediatric otoscopy is essential to correctly identify children with AOM. However, studies have found diagnostic inconsistency and significant overdiagnosis among practitioners. Given the potential public and individual health consequences, there has been a call for improved education regarding the diagnostic certainty of AOM. Yet educational efforts continue to be limited, particularly in regard to competency assessment. The lack of a validated tool to assess otoscopy skill attainment objectively diminishes the instructor's ability to provide useful feedback and direction to the learner.
We have undertaken an educational intervention with the goal of developing a validated Standardized Checklist for Otoscopy Performance Evaluation (SCOPE), building on key principles of the general pediatric ear exam. The SCOPE was developed with the input of process and content experts with attention to specific domains of validity.
Our analysis provides important validity evidence for the SCOPE assessment tool. The instrument was piloted and successfully implemented with medical students and varying levels of residents in pediatrics and emergency medicine over a 5-year period in varied settings: urgent care, large and small pediatric clinics, and the emergency departments at two institutions. It has been used for both instruction and assessment purposes.
Because the SCOPE can be used in teaching demonstration purposes, in formative and summative assessment settings, and across the continuum of learners, this instrument offers the potential for more educational efforts in the field of assessment in direct patient care. We anticipate that the SCOPE will foster an environment of efficient yet high-yield review and discussion of otoscopy and diagnostic competency.
急性中耳炎(AOM)是美国最常被诊断出的儿科疾病,也是抗生素处方最常见的指征。小儿耳镜检查技能对于正确识别患有AOM的儿童至关重要。然而,研究发现从业者之间存在诊断不一致和严重的过度诊断情况。鉴于其对公众和个人健康可能产生的后果,人们呼吁加强关于AOM诊断确定性的教育。然而,教育工作仍然有限,特别是在能力评估方面。缺乏一种经过验证的工具来客观评估耳镜检查技能的掌握情况,削弱了教师向学习者提供有用反馈和指导的能力。
我们进行了一项教育干预,目标是在一般儿科耳部检查的关键原则基础上,开发一种经过验证的耳镜检查性能评估标准化检查表(SCOPE)。SCOPE是在过程和内容专家的参与下开发的,同时关注有效性的特定领域。
我们的分析为SCOPE评估工具提供了重要的有效性证据。该工具在5年时间里,在不同环境(紧急护理、大小儿科诊所以及两家机构的急诊科)中,对医学生以及不同级别的儿科和急诊医学住院医师进行了试点并成功实施。它已用于教学和评估目的。
由于SCOPE可用于教学示范、形成性和总结性评估环境,以及贯穿学习者的整个过程,该工具为直接患者护理评估领域的更多教育努力提供了潜力。我们预计SCOPE将营造一个高效且高产的耳镜检查和诊断能力复习与讨论环境。