Andrés Isaza-Restrepo, Natalia Buitrago-Ricaurte, Pablo Bermúdez-Hernández, Daniel Ariza-Salamanca, Milciades Ibañez-Pinilla, John Vergel
School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Medical and Health Sciences Education Research Group, Universidad del Rosario, Bogotá, Colombia.
School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Medical and Health Sciences Education Research Group, Cannon Research Group, Universidad del Rosario, Bogotá, Colombia.
BMC Med Educ. 2025 Mar 18;25(1):396. doi: 10.1186/s12909-024-06571-z.
Using Virtual Patients (VPs) in medical education has gained popularity, especially during the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, which restricted traditional clinical training. VPs provide a learning platform for students to refine their clinical reasoning and decision-making skills in a risk-free environment. Although the educational benefits of VPs are well known, there is still a need for validated tools to assess student perceptions, which are key to optimizing learning outcomes. The Virtual Patient Integration Rating Scale (VPIRS) has made a valuable contribution in this regard, having been established in English-speaking contexts, but its applicability in Ibero-American countries remains poorly explored. This study aimed to fill this gap by transculturally validating VPIRS for Spanish-speaking medical education environments, ensuring it reflects cultural nuances.
We conducted a two-phase transcultural validation of the VPIRS on medical students at the Universidad del Rosario. First, we translated and culturally adapted the VPIRS, using the modified Delphi method for face validation. Second, we assessed the construct validity, internal consistency, reproducibility, and reliability of the scale through a test-retest approach with 153 participants, using descriptive statistics, factor analysis, and reliability testing in SPSS.
The VPIRS was successfully adapted and validated for transcultural use in Spanish (VPIRS-E). The exploratory and factor analyses maintained the original scale's four-dimensional structure, explaining 61.8% of the total variance, with an overall Cronbach's alpha of 0.826. Test-retest reliability demonstrated robust intraclass correlation coefficients ranging from 0.8 to 0.9.
The VPIRS-E is a reliable and valid instrument that has maintained the structural integrity of the original scale and has demonstrated strong internal consistency across all of its domains. These results demonstrate the suitability of the VPIRS-E to assess medical students' perceptions of the use of VPs in Spanish-speaking learning contexts. The successful validation of this instrument also opens avenues for expanded international comparative studies, allowing fora deeper understanding of the effective integration of VPs in different medical education curricula.
在医学教育中使用虚拟患者(VPs)越来越受欢迎,尤其是在严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2)大流行期间,这限制了传统的临床培训。虚拟患者为学生提供了一个学习平台,使他们能够在无风险的环境中完善临床推理和决策技能。尽管虚拟患者的教育益处众所周知,但仍需要经过验证的工具来评估学生的看法,这是优化学习成果的关键。虚拟患者整合评分量表(VPIRS)在这方面做出了宝贵贡献,它已在英语环境中建立,但其在伊比利亚美洲国家的适用性仍未得到充分探索。本研究旨在通过对VPIRS进行跨文化验证,以适用于西班牙语医学教育环境,确保其反映文化细微差别,从而填补这一空白。
我们对罗萨里奥大学的医学生进行了VPIRS的两阶段跨文化验证。首先,我们使用改良的德尔菲法进行表面效度验证,对VPIRS进行翻译和文化调适。其次,我们通过对153名参与者采用重测法,使用SPSS中的描述性统计、因子分析和信度测试,评估了该量表的结构效度、内部一致性、可重复性和信度。
VPIRS已成功改编并验证可在西班牙语环境中进行跨文化使用(VPIRS-E)。探索性分析和因子分析维持了原量表的四维结构,解释了总方差的61.8%,总体Cronbach's α系数为0.826。重测信度显示组内相关系数稳健,范围从0.8到0.9。
VPIRS-E是一种可靠且有效的工具,它保持了原量表的结构完整性,并在其所有领域都表现出很强的内部一致性。这些结果表明VPIRS-E适用于评估医学生在西班牙语学习环境中对使用虚拟患者的看法。该工具的成功验证也为扩大国际比较研究开辟了道路,有助于更深入地了解虚拟患者在不同医学教育课程中的有效整合。