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1.
Acad Med ; 99(7): 708-715, 2024 Jul 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38466581

RESUMEN

ABSTRACT: Although U.S. medical education has continued to place increased emphasis on defining competency standards and ensuring accountability to the public, health care inequities have persisted, several basic health outcomes have worsened, public trust in the health care system has eroded, and moral distress, burnout, and attrition among practicing physicians have escalated. These opposing trends beg the question of how the "good doctor" concept may be strengthened. In this perspective, the authors argue that revisiting the construct of physician character from an affirmational perspective could meaningfully improve medical education's impact on overall health by more holistically conceptualizing what-and who-a good doctor is. The authors introduce positive psychology's framework of character strengths, probe the distinction between character strengths and medical professionalism, and summarize the role of character strengths in promoting physician engagement and well-being in health care work. They contend that a systems-level approach to cultivating character strengths will foster physician moral agency and well-being and, by extension, transformational change in health care. Consistent with best practice in modern character education, the authors propose that institutions mindfully cultivate moral community among all stakeholders (students, faculty, staff, postgraduate trainees, and patients) and that moral community interaction centers on each member's personal aspirations with respect to living a good life, guided by the character strengths framework and informed by patient perspectives.


Asunto(s)
Médicos , Humanos , Médicos/psicología , Educación Médica/métodos , Estados Unidos , Profesionalismo
2.
Ann Surg ; 273(4): 701-708, 2021 04 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33201114

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to propose an evidence-based blueprint for training, assessment, and certification of operative performance for surgical trainees. SUMMARY BACKGROUND DATA: Operative skill is a critical aspect of surgical performance. High-quality assessment of operative skill therefore has profound implications for training, accreditation, certification, and the public trust of the profession. Current methods of operative skill assessment for surgeons rely heavily on global assessment strategies across a very broad domain of procedures. There is no mechanism to assure technical competence for individual procedures. The science and scalability of operative skill assessment has progressed significantly in recent decades, and can inform a much more meaningful strategy for competency-based assessment of operative skill than has been previously achieved. METHODS: The present article reviews the current status and science of operative skill assessment and proposes a template for competency-based assessment which could be used to update training, accreditation, and certification processes. The proposal is made in reference to general surgery but is more generally applicable to other procedural specialties. RESULTS: Streamlined, routine assessment of every procedure performed by surgical trainees is feasible and would enable a more competency-based educational paradigm. In light of the constraints imposed by both clinical volume and assessment bias, trainees should be expected to become proficient and be measured against a mastery learning standard only for the most important and highest-frequency procedures. For less frequently observed procedures, performance can be compared to a norm-referenced standard and, to provide an overall trajectory of performance, analyzed in aggregate. Key factors in implementing this approach are the number of evaluations, the number of raters, the timeliness of evaluation, and evaluation items. CONCLUSIONS: A competency-based operative skill assessment can be incorporated into surgical training, assessment, and certification. The time has come to develop a systematic approach to this issue as a means of demonstrating professional standards worthy of the public trust.


Asunto(s)
Certificación , Competencia Clínica , Educación Basada en Competencias/métodos , Evaluación Educacional/métodos , Cirugía General/educación , Internado y Residencia/métodos , Procedimientos Quirúrgicos Operativos/educación , Humanos
3.
Teach Learn Med ; 32(4): 380-388, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32281403

RESUMEN

Phenomenon: Detection of visual and auditory clinical findings is part of medical students' core clinical performance abilities that a medical education curriculum should teach, assess, and remediate. However, there is a limited understanding of how students develop these skills. While training physical exam technical skills has received significant attention and emphasis, teaching and assessing medical students' ability to detect and interpret visual and auditory clinical findings skills has been less systematic. Therefore, the purpose of this study is to investigate how medical students' visual and auditory clinical findings skills progress and develop over their four years of undergraduate medical education. This study will provide educators insights that can guide curriculum refinements that lead to improving students' abilities in this area. Approach: A computer-based progress exam was created to measure the longitudinal development of students' abilities to detect and interpret visual and auditory findings. After pilot testing, sixty test items were developed in collaboration with six clinical faculty members and two medical education researchers. The exam includes detection and description of ECG, x-ray, heart sounds, breath sounds, skin lesions, and movement findings. The exam was administered to students at the beginning of each training year since 2014. Additionally, the exam was administered to the Class of 2017 prior to their graduation. Measurement validity and reliability tests were conducted. Descriptive statistics and ANOVA were used to determine progress. Findings: More than 98% of students in four years of training completed the exam each year. The exam instrument had high reliabilities and demonstrated acceptable concurrent validity when compared with other academic performance data. Findings showed that students' visual and auditory clinical findings skills increased each training year until their fourth year. There was no performance improvement between incoming Year 4 students and graduating Year 4 students. While group means increased, class performance did not become more homogeneous across four years. Longitudinal data showed the same performance patterns as the cross-sectional data. Performance of the bottom quartile of graduating fourth-year students was not significantly higher than the performance of the top quartile of incoming first-year students who had not had formal medical training. Insights: A longitudinal study to follow learners' performance in detecting and interpreting visual and auditory clinical findings can provide meaningful insights regarding the effects of medical training programs on performance growth. The present study suggests that our medical curriculum is not effective in bringing all students to a higher level of performance in detecting and interpreting visual and auditory clinical findings. This study calls for further investigation how medical students can develop visual and auditory detection and interpretation skills in undergraduate medical education. There is a need for planned curriculum and assessment of medical students' skills in detecting and interpreting visual and auditory clinical findings.


Asunto(s)
Competencia Clínica/normas , Educación de Pregrado en Medicina/normas , Evaluación Educacional/métodos , Medicina Basada en la Evidencia/educación , Examen Físico/normas , Estudiantes de Medicina/estadística & datos numéricos , Estudios Transversales , Curriculum/normas , Humanos , Estudios Longitudinales
4.
Acad Med ; 95(9S A Snapshot of Medical Student Education in the United States and Canada: Reports From 145 Schools): S164-S167, 2020 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33626672
5.
Acad Med ; 94(1): 53-58, 2019 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30157091

RESUMEN

The authors present follow-up to a prior publication, which proposed a new model for third-year clerkships. The new model was created to address deficiencies in the clinical year and to rectify a recognized mismatch between students' learning needs and the realities of today's clinical settings. The new curricular model was implemented at Southern Illinois University School of Medicine in academic year 2016-2017. Guiding principles were developed. These were to more deeply engage students in experiential learning through clinical immersion; to pair individual faculty with individual students over longer periods of time so real trust could be developed; to provide students with longitudinal clinical reasoning education under controlled instructional conditions; to simplify goals and objectives for the core clerkships and align them with student learning needs; and to provide students with individualized activities to help them explore areas of interest, choose their specialty, and improve areas of clinical weakness before the fourth year. The authors discuss reactions by faculty and students to the new curriculum, which were mostly positive, as well as several outcomes. Students showed very different attitudes toward what they defined as success in the clerkship year, reflective of their deeper immersion. Students spent more time working in clinical settings and performed more procedures. Performance on Step 2 Clinical Knowledge and Clinical Skills was unchanged from traditional clerkship years. The 2015 article called for rethinking the third-year clerkships. The authors have shown that such change is possible, and the new curriculum can be implemented with successful early outcomes.


Asunto(s)
Prácticas Clínicas/normas , Competencia Clínica/normas , Curriculum , Educación de Pregrado en Medicina/normas , Estudiantes de Medicina , Adulto , Femenino , Humanos , Illinois , Masculino , Encuestas y Cuestionarios , Adulto Joven
6.
Med Teach ; 41(4): 457-464, 2019 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30451051

RESUMEN

Introduction: ASPIRE Excellence Awards in Student Assessment are offered to medical schools with innovative and comprehensive assessment programmes adjudged by international experts, using evidence-based criteria. The journeys of three ASPIRE-winning medical schools toward "assessment excellence" are presented. These schools include Aga Khan University Medical College (AKU-MC), Pakistan, Southern Illinois University School of Medicine (SIUSOM), USA, and University of Leeds School of Medicine, UK. Methods: The unfolding journeys highlighting achievements, innovations, and essential components of each assessment programme were compared to identify differences and commonalities. Results: Cultural contextual differences included developed-versus-developing country, east-west, type of regulatory bodies, and institutional-versus-national certifying/licensing examinations, which influence curricula and assessments. In all, 12 essential commonalities were found: alignment with institutional vision; sustained assessment leadership; stakeholder engagement; communication between curriculum and assessment; assessment-for-learning and feedback; longitudinal student profiling of outcome achievement; assessment rigor and robustness; 360° feedback from-and-to assessment; continuous enrichment through rigorous quality assurance; societal sensitivity; influencing others; and a "wow factor." Conclusions: Although the journeys of the three medical schools were undertaken in different cultural contexts, similar core components highlight strong foundations in student assessment. The journeys continue as assessment programmes remain dynamic and measurement science expands. This article may be helpful to other institutions pursuing excellence in assessment.


Asunto(s)
Evaluación Educacional/métodos , Evaluación Educacional/normas , Aprendizaje , Facultades de Medicina/organización & administración , Distinciones y Premios , Comunicación , Curriculum , Países Desarrollados , Países en Desarrollo , Retroalimentación Formativa , Humanos , Liderazgo , Innovación Organizacional , Facultades de Medicina/normas
7.
MedEdPublish (2016) ; 6: 82, 2017.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38406429

RESUMEN

This article was migrated. The article was marked as recommended. This Personal View article describes the experience of Southern Illinois University School of Medicine (SIUSOM) with the AMEE School Programme for International Recognition of Excellence in Education (ASPIRE) awards program. Institutional leaders considering applying may need something more than the program description to take the plunge. We use narrative to present our reasons for applying, how the application and review process went for us, and the benefits of getting involved. By sharing our story, we hope to motivate other educators who believe in their school's educational excellence to visualize themselves as applicants and take action.

8.
Med Teach ; 38(9): 904-10, 2016 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26805785

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: The idea of competency-based education sounds great on paper. Who wouldn't argue for a standardized set of performance-based assessments to assure competency in graduating students and residents? Even so, conceptual concerns have already been raised about this new system and there is yet no evidence to refute their veracity. AIMS: We argue that practical concerns deserve equal consideration, and present evidence strongly suggesting these concerns should be taken seriously. METHOD: Specifically, we share two historical examples that illustrate what happened in two disparate contexts (K-12 education and the Department of Defense [DOD]) when competency (or outcomes-based) assessment frameworks were implemented. We then examine how observation and assessment of clinical performance stands currently in medical schools and residencies, since these methodologies will be challenged to a greater degree by expansive lists of competencies and milestones. RESULTS/CONCLUSIONS: We conclude with suggestions as to a way forward, because clearly the assessment of competency and the ability to guarantee that graduates are ready for medical careers is of utmost importance. Hopefully the headlong rush to competencies, milestones, and core entrustable professional activities can be tempered before even more time, effort, frustration and resources are invested in an endeavor which history suggests will collapse under its own weight.


Asunto(s)
Competencia Clínica , Evaluación Educacional , Estudiantes de Medicina , Evaluación Educacional/métodos , Estados Unidos
9.
Med Educ ; 49(9): 920-7, 2015 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26296408

RESUMEN

CONTEXT: This study is based on the premise that the game of 'Twenty Questions' (TQ) tests the knowledge people acquire through their lives and how well they organise and store it so that they can effectively retrieve, combine and use it to address new life challenges. Therefore, performance on TQ may predict how effectively medical school applicants will organise and store knowledge they acquire during medical training to support their work as doctors. OBJECTIVES: This study was designed to determine whether TQ game performance on medical school entrance predicts performance on a clinical performance examination near graduation. METHODS: This prospective, longitudinal, observational study involved each medical student in one class playing a game of TQ on a non-medical topic during the first week of medical school. Near graduation, these students completed a 14-case clinical performance examination. Performance on the TQ task was compared with performance on the clinical performance examination. RESULTS: The 24 students who exhibited a logical approach to the TQ task performed better on all senior clinical performance examination measures than did the 26 students who exhibited a random approach. Approach to the task was a better predictor of senior examination diagnosis justification performance than was the Medical College Admission Test (MCAT) Biological Science Test score and accounts for a substantial amount of score variation not attributable to a co-relationship with MCAT Biological Science Test performance. CONCLUSIONS: Approach to the TQ task appears to be one reasonable indicator of how students process and store knowledge acquired in their everyday lives and may be a useful predictor of how they will process the knowledge acquired during medical training. The TQ task can be fitted into one slot of a mini medical interview.


Asunto(s)
Prueba de Admisión Académica , Solución de Problemas , Criterios de Admisión Escolar , Facultades de Medicina , Adulto , Evaluación Educacional/métodos , Humanos , Estudios Longitudinales , Masculino , Estudiantes de Medicina/psicología
10.
Acad Med ; 90(4): 404-7, 2015 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25295965

RESUMEN

As part of the outcomes-based accreditation process, the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) now requires that medical specialties formulate and use educational milestones to assess residents' performance. These milestones are specialty-specific achievements that residents are expected to demonstrate at established intervals in their training. In this Commentary, the authors argue that the pressure to efficiently use program directors' and faculty members' time, particularly in the increasingly clinical-revenue-dependent model of the academic medical center, will lead program directors to meet these new accreditation expectations solely by adding items that assess these competencies to global end-of-rotation rating forms. This approach will increase the workload of faculty but will not provide new and useful information about residents' competence. These same concerns could apply if assessment committees attempt to measure these new performance dimensions without using direct observation to evaluate residents' performance. In these circumstances, the milestones movement will fall short of its intention and potential. In this Commentary, the authors outline and provide evidence from the literature for their concerns. They discuss the role that human judges play in measuring performance, the measurement characteristics of global performance ratings, and the problems associated with simply adding items to existing global rating forms.


Asunto(s)
Educación Basada en Competencias , Educación Médica/métodos
11.
Acad Med ; 89(5): 790-8, 2014 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24667511

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: To determine the diagnostic justification proficiency of senior medical students across a broad spectrum of cases with common chief complaints and diagnoses. METHOD: The authors gathered diagnostic justification exercise data from the Senior Clinical Comprehensive Examination taken by Southern Illinois University School of Medicine's students from the classes of 2011 (n = 67), 2012 (n = 66), and 2013 (n = 79). After interviewing and examining standardized patients, students listed their key findings and diagnostic possibilities considered, and provided a written explanation of how they used key findings to move from their initial differential diagnoses to their final diagnosis. Two physician judges blindly rated responses. RESULTS: Student diagnostic justification performance was highly variable from case to case and often rated below expectations. Of the students in the classes of 2011, 2012, and 2013, 57% (38/67), 23% (15/66), and 33% (26/79) were judged borderline or poor on diagnostic justification performance for more than 50% of the cases on the examination. CONCLUSIONS: Student diagnostic justification performance was inconsistent across the range of cases, common chief complaints, and underlying diagnoses used in this study. More than 20% of students exhibited borderline or poor diagnostic justification performance on more than 50% of the cases. If these results are confirmed in other medical schools, attention needs to be directed to investigating new curricular methods that ensure deliberate practice of these competencies across the spectrum of common chief complaints and diagnoses and do not depend on the available mix of patients.


Asunto(s)
Prácticas Clínicas/métodos , Errores Diagnósticos , Educación de Pregrado en Medicina/métodos , Evaluación Educacional , Competencia Clínica , Diagnóstico Diferencial , Estudios de Evaluación como Asunto , Femenino , Humanos , Illinois , Masculino , Anamnesis , Examen Físico , Facultades de Medicina , Estudiantes de Medicina/estadística & datos numéricos , Adulto Joven
12.
Teach Learn Med ; 25 Suppl 1: S44-9, 2013.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24246106

RESUMEN

Patient safety is an important topic that has been receiving more attention in the current health care climate. Patient safety as a curriculum topic in medical schools has only become apparent in the late 1990 s, and much more needs to be done. This article summarizes patient safety curricular content as it occurred (or did not occur) in medical education circles in the past (pre-1990 s), and present. It also makes some recommendations for the future of medical education curricula in the area of patient safety, using a framework for the development of expertise using the Dreyfus educational model.


Asunto(s)
Educación de Pregrado en Medicina/tendencias , Modelos Educacionales , Seguridad del Paciente , Curriculum/tendencias , Humanos , Facultades de Medicina
13.
Med Educ ; 47(3): 309-16, 2013 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23398017

RESUMEN

CONTEXT: The process whereby medical students employ integrated analytic and non-analytic diagnostic strategies is not fully understood. Analysing academic performance data could provide a perspective complementary to that of laboratory experiments when investigating the nature of diagnostic strategy. This study examined the performance data of medical students in an integrated curriculum to determine the relative contributions of biomedical knowledge and clinical pattern recognition to diagnostic strategy. METHODS: Structural equation modelling was used to examine the relationship between biomedical knowledge and clinical cognition (clinical information gathering and interpretation) assessed in Years 1 and 2 of medical school and their relative contributions to diagnostic justification assessed at the beginning of Year 4. Modelling was applied to the academic performance data of 133 medical students who received their md degrees in 2011 and 2012. RESULTS: The model satisfactorily fit the data. The correlation between biomedical knowledge and clinical cognition was low-moderate (0.26). The paths between these two constructs and diagnostic justification were moderate and slightly favoured biomedical knowledge (0.47 and 0.40 for biomedical knowledge and clinical cognition, respectively). CONCLUSIONS: The findings suggest that within the first 2 years of medical school, students possessed separate, but complementary, cognitive tools, comprising biomedical knowledge and clinical pattern recognition, which contributed to an integrated diagnostic strategy at the beginning of Year 4. Assessing diagnostic justification, which requires students to make their thinking explicit, may promote the integration of analytic and non-analytic processing into diagnostic strategy.


Asunto(s)
Diagnóstico , Educación de Pregrado en Medicina , Evaluación Educacional/estadística & datos numéricos , Procesos Mentales , Modelos Estadísticos , Estudiantes de Medicina/psicología , Competencia Clínica/estadística & datos numéricos , Curriculum , Femenino , Humanos , Conocimiento , Masculino
14.
Med Teach ; 34(12): 1024-32, 2012.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22957508

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Residents with performance problems create substantial burden on programs and institutions. Understanding the nature and quality of performance problems can help in learning to address performance problems. AIM: We sought to illuminate the effects of resident performance problems and the potential solutions for those problems from the perspectives of people with various roles in health care. METHODS: We created a composite portrait from several residents who demonstrated a cluster of common performance characteristics and whose chronic or serious maladaptive behavior and response to situations created problems for themselves, for their clinical colleagues, and for faculty of their residency program. The composite was derived from in-depth interviews of program directors and review of resident records. We solicited practitioners from multiple fields to respond to the portrait by answering a series of questions about severity, prognosis, and how and whether one could reliably remediate a person with these performance characteristics. We present their perspectives in a manner borrowed from the New England Journal of Medicine's "Case Records of the Massachusetts General Hospital." RESULTS: We created a composite portrait of a resident whose behavior suggested he felt entitled to benefits his peers were not entitled to. Experts reflecting on his behavior varied in their opinion about the effect the resident would have on the health care system. They suggested approaches to remediation that required substantial time and effort from the faculty. CONCLUSION: Programs must balance the needs of individual residents to adjust their behaviors with the needs of the health care system and other people within it.


Asunto(s)
Educación de Postgrado en Medicina , Comunicación Interdisciplinaria , Cuerpo Médico de Hospitales/psicología , Mala Conducta Profesional/psicología , Autoimagen , Humanos , Investigación Cualitativa
15.
Acad Med ; 87(8): 1008-14, 2012 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22722355

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: Fostering ability to organize and use medical knowledge to guide data collection, make diagnostic decisions, and defend those decisions is at the heart of medical training. However, these abilities are not systematically examined prior to graduation. This study examined diagnostic justification (DXJ) ability of medical students shortly before graduation. METHOD: All senior medical students in the Classes of 2011 (n = 67) and 2012 (n = 70) at Southern Illinois University were required to take and pass a 14-case, standardized patient examination prior to graduation. For nine cases, students were required to write a free-text response indicating how they used patient data to move from their differential to their final diagnosis. Two physicians graded each DXJ response. DXJ scores were compared with traditional standardized patient examination (SCCX) scores. RESULTS: The average intraclass correlation between raters' rankings of DXJ responses was 0.75 and 0.64 for the Classes of 2011 and 2012, respectively. Student DXJ scores were consistent across the nine cases. Using SCCX and DXJ scores led to the same pass-fail decision in a majority of cases. However, there were many cases where discrepancies occurred. In a majority of those cases, students would fail using the DXJ score but pass using the SCCX score. Common DXJ errors are described. CONCLUSIONS: Commonly used standardized patient examination component scores (history/physical examination checklist score, findings, differential diagnosis, diagnosis) are not direct, comprehensive measures of DXJ ability. Critical deficiencies in DXJ abilities may thus go undiscovered.


Asunto(s)
Competencia Clínica/normas , Toma de Decisiones , Errores Diagnósticos , Evaluación Educacional , Medicina Interna/normas , Estudiantes de Medicina , Adulto , Lista de Verificación , Diagnóstico Diferencial , Educación de Pregrado en Medicina , Femenino , Humanos , Illinois , Masculino , Anamnesis/normas , Simulación de Paciente , Examen Físico/normas
16.
Acad Med ; 86(9): 1148-54, 2011 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21785314

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: Little is known about the acquisition of clinical reasoning skills in medical school, the development of clinical reasoning over the medical curriculum as a whole, and the impact of various curricular methodologies on these skills. This study investigated (1) whether there are differences in clinical reasoning skills between learners at different years of medical school, and (2) whether there are differences in performance between students at schools with various curricular methodologies. METHOD: Students (n = 2,394) who had completed zero to three years of medical school at five U.S. medical schools participated in a cross-sectional study in 2008. Students took the same diagnostic pattern recognition (DPR) and clinical data interpretation (CDI) tests. Percent correct scores were used to determine performance differences. Data from all schools and students at all levels were aggregated for further analysis. RESULTS: Student performance increased substantially as a result of each year of training. Gains in DPR and CDI performance during the third year of medical school were not as great as in previous years across the five schools. CDI performance and performance gains were lower than DPR performance and gains. Performance gains attributable to training at each of the participating medical schools were more similar than different. CONCLUSIONS: Years of training accounted for most of the variation in DPR and CDI performance. As a rule, students at higher training levels performed better on both tests, though the expected larger gains during the third year of medical school did not materialize.


Asunto(s)
Competencia Clínica , Técnicas y Procedimientos Diagnósticos , Aprendizaje Basado en Problemas , Estudios Transversales , Educación de Pregrado en Medicina , Evaluación Educacional , Humanos , Facultades de Medicina , Estudiantes de Medicina , Estados Unidos
17.
Acad Med ; 86(4): 516-20, 2011 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21346501

RESUMEN

PURPOSE: This study was designed to determine whether preclerkship performance examinations could accurately identify medical students at risk for failing a senior clinical performance examination (CPE). METHOD: This study used a retrospective case-control, multiyear design, with contingency table analyses, to examine the performance of 412 students in the classes of 2005 to 2010 at a midwestern medical school. During their second year, these students took four CPEs that each used three standardized patient (SP) cases, for a total of 12 cases. The authors correlated each student's average year 2 case score with the student's average case score on a senior (year 4) CPE. Contingency table analysis was carried out using performance on the year 2 CPEs and passing/failing the senior CPE. Similar analyses using each student's United States Medical Licensing Examination (USMLE) Step 1 scores were also performed. Sensitivity, specificity, odds ratio, and relative risk were calculated for two year 2 performance standards. RESULTS: Students' low performances relative to their class on the year 2 CPEs were a strong predictor that they would fail the senior CPE. Their USMLE Step 1 scores also correlated with their performance on the senior CPE, although the predictive values for these scores were considerably weaker. CONCLUSIONS: Under the conditions of this study, preclerkship (year 2) CPEs strongly predicted medical students at risk for failing a senior CPE. This finding opens the opportunity for remediation of deficits prior to or during clerkships.


Asunto(s)
Prácticas Clínicas , Educación de Pregrado en Medicina/normas , Evaluación Educacional , Escolaridad , Estudios de Casos y Controles , Distribución de Chi-Cuadrado , Competencia Clínica , Humanos , Illinois , Concesión de Licencias , Simulación de Paciente , Valor Predictivo de las Pruebas , Estudios Retrospectivos , Factores de Riesgo , Sensibilidad y Especificidad , Estados Unidos
18.
Teach Learn Med ; 23(1): 3-11, 2011 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21240775

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Current remediation strategies for students failing standardized patient examinations represent poorly targeted approaches since the specific nature of clinical performance weaknesses has not been defined. PURPOSE: The purpose is to determine the impact of a specifically targeted clinical performance course required of students who failed a clinical performance examination. METHODS: A month-long clinical performance course, targeted to treat specific types of clinical performance deficiencies, was designed to remediate students failing standardized patient examinations in 2007 (n=8) and 2008 (n=5). Participating students were assessed on pre- and postperformance measures, including multiple-choice tests that measured diagnostic pattern recognition and clinical data interpretation and clinical performance measures using standardized clinical encounters. Comparisons between average pre- and postintervention performance scores were computed using paired sample t tests. Results were adjusted for regression toward the mean. RESULTS: In both 2007 and 2008, the mean preintervention clinical data interpretation and standardized patient examination scores were below the criterion referenced passing standard set for the clinical competency exam. In both years the mean postintervention scores for the participants were above the passing standard for these two examinations. Pre- and postintervention differences were statistically significant in both cases. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides insight into the reasons that students fail clinical performance examinations and elucidates one method by which such students may be successfully remediated.


Asunto(s)
Competencia Clínica/normas , Evaluación Educacional/métodos , Examen Físico/métodos , Evaluación de Programas y Proyectos de Salud , Estudiantes de Medicina/estadística & datos numéricos , Competencia Clínica/estadística & datos numéricos , Intervalos de Confianza , Educación Médica , Evaluación Educacional/normas , Evaluación Educacional/estadística & datos numéricos , Escolaridad , Humanos , Examen Físico/normas , Examen Físico/estadística & datos numéricos , Desarrollo de Programa , Análisis y Desempeño de Tareas , Estados Unidos , Grabación de Cinta de Video
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