Solomon D J, Speer A J, Perkowski L C, DiPette D J
Division of General Medicine, University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston 77555-0566.
Acad Med. 1994 Sep;69(9):754-7. doi: 10.1097/00001888-199409000-00022.
To evaluate a novel item format for assessing clinical problem solving in a standardized-patient examination (SPE).
In 1992-93 a key-findings item format was included in two versions of three stations in an SPE (given in the style of an objective structured clinical examination) that was taken by 198 third-year students at the end of their three-month internal medicine clerkship at the University of Texas Medical Branch at Galveston. Each of the stations involved an extended matching question that listed ten to 12 findings. The students were told to select as many or as few findings as they wished that were key in leading them to their diagnosis of the standardized patient's (SP's) problem. The findings fell into three categories: (1) key to the diagnosis, (2) provided by the SP but not key to the diagnosis, and (3) not provided by the SP.
A total of 169 students (85%) identified at least one of the findings determined to be key in each of the stations. Correctly identifying key findings was related to correctly diagnosing the SP's problem. A total of 145 students (73%) indicated at least one finding across the three cases as key to their diagnosis but not given by the SP. Selecting nonexistent findings as key to diagnosis was not found to be related to performance on the SPE. It was hypothesized that once a diagnosis was made, the students had difficulty differentiating key findings that had led them to the diagnosis from other key features of their cognitive model of illness.
The students were generally able to obtain and recognize at least some of the key information they needed to formulate appropriate differential diagnoses, and the ability to identify key findings was shown to be related to identifying the most appropriate diagnosis. The key-findings item format has potential both in assessment and for gaining a better understanding of the clinical problem-solving process.
评估一种用于在标准化病人考试(SPE)中评估临床问题解决能力的新型题目形式。
1992 - 1993年,一种关键发现题目形式被纳入到一个SPE的三个考站中的两个版本中(以客观结构化临床考试的形式给出),加尔维斯顿德克萨斯大学医学分校的198名三年级学生在为期三个月的内科实习结束时参加了该考试。每个考站都涉及一个扩展匹配问题,列出了10至12项检查结果。学生们被告知可以根据自己的意愿选择任意数量的他们认为对诊断标准化病人(SP)问题至关重要或者非关键的检查结果。这些检查结果分为三类:(1)诊断关键;(2)由SP提供但对诊断非关键;(3)未由SP提供。
共有169名学生(85%)在每个考站中都至少识别出了一项被确定为关键的检查结果。正确识别关键检查结果与正确诊断SP的问题相关。共有145名学生(73%)指出在这三个病例中至少有一项检查结果对他们的诊断至关重要但未由SP提供。未发现将不存在的检查结果选为诊断关键与SPE成绩相关。据推测,一旦做出诊断,学生们很难区分那些引导他们做出诊断的关键检查结果和他们疾病认知模型中的其他关键特征。
学生们通常能够获取并识别出至少一些他们在制定适当鉴别诊断时所需的关键信息,并且识别关键检查结果的能力与识别最合适的诊断相关。关键发现题目形式在评估以及更好地理解临床问题解决过程方面都具有潜力。