Philippon Anne-Laure, Baud Aurelien, Dumont Margaux, Remini Sidi Ahmed, Leroy Jeremy, Truchot Jennifer, Triby Emmanuel, Freund Yonathan
Laboratoire Interuniversitaire de Sciences de l'Education (LISEC) Learning Sciences Department Université de Strasbourg Strasbourg France.
Emergency Department Hôpital Pitié-Salpêtrière Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris Paris France.
AEM Educ Train. 2021 Aug 1;5(4):e10704. doi: 10.1002/aet2.10704. eCollection 2021 Aug.
It is critical to assess competency of medical students and residents in emergency medicine (EM) during undergraduate and graduate medical education. However, very few valid tools exist to assess both technical and nontechnical skills in the specific context of EM. Three Acute Care Assessment Tools (ACAT 1, 2, and 3) have been previously developed for three acute care conditions: cardiac arrest (1), coma (2), and acute respiratory failure (3). This study aimed to evaluate the reproducibility of the tools.
The tool was tested using recorded videos of simulation sessions of fourth year medical students and first year residents in EM. Raters independently reviewed the videos two times in a 3-month interval, and interrater and intrarater reliability using intraclass correlation (ICC) was calculated. Secondary endpoints included the completeness rate and relevance of the ACAT.
Sixty-two sessions were recorded and 48 videos analyzed (18 for CA and 15 for both respiratory failure and coma. The learners were residents in 32 (66%) of videos. Interrater reliability was excellent (ICC >0.9 for all three contexts) and so was the intrarater reliability (>0.88), both upon first review (month 0, M0) and at 3 months (M3). The usability of the ACAT was good, with a completeness of the items that ranged from 96% to 100%. Only one item of the ACAT 1 had a relevance of 27%, as it could not be completed in 13 scenarios out of 18.
The results demonstrate educators can evaluate students similarly utilizing video recordings of simulated medical scenario. The excellent completeness of the rated items advocated for good usability. The three ACATs can be utilized to assess for completeness of predefined tasks in three acute care broad scenario in a competency-based medical education framework.
在本科和研究生医学教育期间评估医学生和住院医师的急诊医学(EM)能力至关重要。然而,在EM的特定背景下,几乎没有有效的工具来评估技术和非技术技能。先前已经针对三种急性病况开发了三种急性病护理评估工具(ACAT 1、2和3):心脏骤停(1)、昏迷(2)和急性呼吸衰竭(3)。本研究旨在评估这些工具的可重复性。
使用EM专业四年级医学生和一年级住院医师模拟课程的录制视频对该工具进行测试。评分者在3个月的间隔内独立两次审查视频,并使用组内相关系数(ICC)计算评分者间和评分者内信度。次要终点包括ACAT的完整性率和相关性。
记录了62节课程,分析了48个视频(18个关于心脏骤停,15个关于呼吸衰竭和昏迷)。视频中32个(66%)的学习者为住院医师。评分者间信度极佳(所有三种情况的ICC均>0.9),评分者内信度也是如此(>0.88),无论是首次审查时(第0个月,M0)还是3个月时(M3)。ACAT的可用性良好,项目完整性范围为96%至100%。ACAT 1中只有一个项目的相关性为27%,因为在18个场景中有13个无法完成该项目。
结果表明,教育工作者可以利用模拟医疗场景的视频记录对学生进行类似的评估。所评项目的出色完整性表明可用性良好。三种ACAT可用于在基于能力的医学教育框架中评估三种急性病护理广泛场景中预定义任务的完整性。