M. Roy is medical education researcher, Medical Council of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; ORCID: http://orcid.org/0000-0001-8462-7721.
T.J. Wood is professor, Department of Innovation in Medical Education, and director of evaluation-undergraduate medical education, Faculty of Medicine, University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; ORCID: http://orcid.org/0000-0001-9177-704X.
Acad Med. 2020 Nov;95(11S Association of American Medical Colleges Learn Serve Lead: Proceedings of the 59th Annual Research in Medical Education Presentations):S103-S108. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000003632.
Accreditation aims to ensure all training programs meet agreed-upon standards of quality. The process is complex, resource intensive, and costly. Its benefits are difficult to assess because contextual confounds obscure comparisons between systems that do and do not include accreditation. This study explores accreditation's influence "within system" by investigating the relationship between accreditation cycle and performance on a national licensing examination.
Scores on the computer-based portion of the Medical Council of Canada Qualifying Examination Part I, from 1993 to 2017, were examined for all 17 Canadian medical schools. Typically completed upon graduation from medical school, results within each year were transformed for comparability across administrations and linked to timing within each school's accreditation cycle. ANOVAs were used to assess the relationship between accreditation timing and examination scores. Secondary analyses isolated 4-year from 3-year training programs and separated data generated before versus after implementation of a national midcycle informal review program.
Performance on the licensing exam was highest during and shortly after an accreditation site visit, falling significantly until the midpoint in the accreditation cycle (d = 0.47) before rising again. This pattern disappeared after introduction of informal interim review, but too little data have accumulated post implementation to determine if interim review is sufficient to break the influence of accreditation cycle.
Formal, externally driven, accreditation cycles appear associated with educational processes in ways that translated into student outcomes on a national licensing examination. Whether informal, internal, interim reviews can mediate this effect remains to be seen.
认证旨在确保所有培训计划都符合商定的质量标准。这个过程复杂、资源密集且昂贵。由于背景混淆,使得在没有认证和有认证的系统之间进行比较变得困难,因此很难评估其益处。本研究通过调查认证周期与全国执照考试成绩之间的关系,来探索认证在“系统内”的影响。
对 1993 年至 2017 年期间,来自 17 所加拿大医学院的 17 名加拿大医学生的计算机化部分医学理事会加拿大资格考试第一部分的分数进行了检查。通常在医学院毕业后完成,每年的结果都经过转换以实现各次考试之间的可比性,并与每个学校认证周期内的时间联系起来。使用方差分析来评估认证时间与考试成绩之间的关系。二次分析将 4 年制和 3 年制培训计划分开,并将在全国中期非正式审查计划实施之前和之后生成的数据分开。
在认证现场访问期间和之后不久,执照考试的成绩最高,直到认证周期的中点(d = 0.47)显著下降,然后再次上升。在引入非正式中期审查后,这种模式消失了,但实施后积累的数据太少,无法确定中期审查是否足以打破认证周期的影响。
正式的、外部驱动的认证周期似乎与教育过程有关,这转化为全国执照考试的学生成绩。非正式的、内部的、中期审查是否能够调解这种效果还有待观察。