Sun Ting, Hamstra Stanley J, Yamazaki Kenji, Ren Katherine Jiawen, Smith Brigitte
is an Assistant Professor, Office of Surgical Education, Department of Surgery, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
is a Professor, Department of Surgery, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
J Grad Med Educ. 2025 Apr;17(2):162-171. doi: 10.4300/JGME-D-24-00524.1. Epub 2025 Apr 15.
The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) Milestones use has been formative and low-stakes to date, and transitioning to higher-stakes applications in a truly competency-based medical education (CBME) system requires extensive validity evidence. Surgical specialties, with their unique demands for procedural skills and operative experience, represent a critical context for evaluating the validity of Milestones. To synthesize studies reporting validity evidence for the ACGME Milestones in surgical specialties. This systematic review was conducted based on Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. A systematic literature search was conducted across 8 databases and references to identify studies that reported validity evidence for Milestones in surgical specialties. Literature was reviewed for inclusion using Covidence and coded based on Messick's framework. The quality of the studies was evaluated using the Medical Education Research Study Quality Instrument. A total of 114 studies were included from 2013 to 2023. The primary source of validity evidence (n=45, 39.5%) was relations to other variables (knowledge and skills, learner characteristics, patient/health care, social-emotional variables), followed by response processes (n=38, 33.3%: interrater reliability, rating processes, structure of Clinical Competency Committee, rater training, longitudinal reliability, straightlining) and consequences (n=29, 25.4%: value and utility, intended use, anticipated impact). Only 12 studies (10.5%) reported internal structure evidence. This study provides insights into understanding what constitutes validity evidence within the context of ACGME Milestones in surgical specialties. This review highlights areas where further research is needed to support the moderate to high-stakes use of Milestones in a CBME system.
研究生医学教育认证委员会(ACGME)里程碑目前的用途具有形成性且风险较低,而在真正基于能力的医学教育(CBME)系统中转向风险更高的应用需要大量的效度证据。外科专业因其对操作技能和手术经验的独特要求,是评估里程碑效度的关键背景。为了综合报告ACGME外科专业里程碑效度证据的研究。本系统评价是根据系统评价和Meta分析的首选报告项目指南进行的。在8个数据库和参考文献中进行了系统的文献检索,以识别报告外科专业里程碑效度证据的研究。使用Covidence对文献进行纳入审查,并根据梅西克框架进行编码。使用医学教育研究质量工具评估研究质量。2013年至2023年共纳入114项研究。效度证据的主要来源(n = 45,39.5%)是与其他变量(知识和技能、学习者特征、患者/医疗保健、社会情感变量)的关系,其次是反应过程(n = 38,33.3%:评分者信度、评分过程、临床能力委员会结构、评分者培训、纵向信度、直线化)和结果(n = 29,25.4%:价值和效用、预期用途、预期影响)。只有12项研究(10.5%)报告了内部结构证据。本研究为理解ACGME外科专业里程碑背景下构成效度证据的因素提供了见解。本综述强调了在CBME系统中支持里程碑中度至高风险使用所需进一步研究的领域。