Clarke Benjamin, Smith Samantha E, Phillips Emma Claire, Hamilton Ailsa, Kerins Joanne, Tallentire Victoria R
NHS Lothian, Edinburgh, UK.
The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
BMJ Simul Technol Enhanc Learn. 2020 Sep 29;7(5):285-292. doi: 10.1136/bmjstel-2020-000705. eCollection 2021.
Non-technical skills are recognised to play an integral part in safe and effective patient care. Medi-StuNTS (Medical Students' Non-Technical Skills) is a behavioural marker system developed to enable assessment of medical students' non-technical skills. This study aimed to assess whether newly trained raters with high levels of clinical experience could achieve reliability coefficients of >0.7 and to compare differences in inter-rater reliability of raters with varying clinical experience.
Forty-four raters attended a workshop on Medi-StuNTS before independently rating three videos of medical students participating in immersive simulation scenarios. Data were grouped by raters' levels of clinical experience. Inter-rater reliability was assessed by calculating intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC).
Eleven raters with more than 10 years of clinical experience achieved single-measure ICC of 0.37 and average-measures ICC of 0.87. Fourteen raters with more than or equal to 5 years and less than 10 years of clinical experience achieved single-measure ICC of 0.09 and average-measures ICC of 0.59. Nineteen raters with less than 5 years of clinical experience achieved single-measure ICC of 0.09 and average-measures ICC 0.65.
Using 11 newly trained raters with high levels of clinical experience produced highly reliable ratings that surpassed the prespecified inter-rater reliability standard; however, a single rater from this group would not achieve sufficiently reliable ratings. This is consistent with previous studies using other medical behavioural marker systems. This study demonstrated a decrease in inter-rater reliability of raters with lower levels of clinical experience, suggesting caution when using this population as raters for assessment of non-technical skills.
非技术技能被认为在安全有效的患者护理中起着不可或缺的作用。Medi-StuNTS(医学生非技术技能)是一种行为标记系统,旨在评估医学生的非技术技能。本研究旨在评估具有高水平临床经验的新培训评分者是否能达到>0.7的可靠性系数,并比较不同临床经验评分者之间评分者间可靠性的差异。
44名评分者参加了关于Medi-StuNTS的研讨会,然后独立对3段医学生参与沉浸式模拟场景的视频进行评分。数据按评分者的临床经验水平分组。通过计算组内相关系数(ICC)评估评分者间的可靠性。
11名具有超过10年临床经验的评分者的单次测量ICC为0.37,平均测量ICC为0.87。14名具有5年及以上且少于10年临床经验的评分者的单次测量ICC为0.09,平均测量ICC为0.59。19名具有少于5年临床经验的评分者的单次测量ICC为0.09,平均测量ICC为0.65。
使用11名新培训的具有高水平临床经验的评分者产生了高度可靠的评分,超过了预先规定的评分者间可靠性标准;然而,该组中的单个评分者无法获得足够可靠的评分。这与之前使用其他医学行为标记系统的研究一致。本研究表明临床经验水平较低的评分者间可靠性降低,这表明在将该人群用作评估非技术技能的评分者时应谨慎。