Title: R3P Colloquium
1R3P Colloquium American Board of Pediatrics Jan.
31 Feb. 2, 2007 The Past, Present and Future
Assessments of Clinical Competence A Canadian
Perspective
Bob Hilliard MD EdD FRCPC Pediatric Specialty
Committee
2Many, many thanks for the invitation!! Overview
No Debate Whatsoever Assessments and
evaluations in a pediatric residency program must
be an integral part of the curriculum (teaching
and learning experiences) and based on clear,
obtainable and measurable educational
objectives!! Examinations and evaluations
influence, direct and drive resident learning
what, how, why. This includes not just the
content of what is on the examination but also
the format.
3- Pediatric Training In Canada
- Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of
Canada - Surveys accredits programs, credentials
certifies specialists - Pediatric residencies are all university based
(16) - Goals Objectives the pediatric consultant
- Three (3) Core years
- ? one (1) additional year of general pediatrics,
or - ? the first year (1) of pediatric subspecialty
training - Prior to 2001 the final exam was
- ? Multiple Choice Questions (MCQ) exam
- ? Two-part oral exam
- ? long case observed discussion / short
case - ? four cards selected from a box of questions
4- Objectives of Training
- Specialty Training Requirements in Pediatrics
- CanMEDS Roles ABMS Competencies
- (Essential Key Competencies)
- Medical Expert ? Medical Knowledge
- ? Systems Based Knowledge !
- ? Skills ? Patient Care
- ? Attitudes
- ? Problems
- Communicator ? Interpersonal / communication
- Collaborator skills
- Manager ? Systems-based practice
- Health Advocate
- Scholar ? Practice-based learning
- Professional ? Professionalism
5(No Transcript)
6- In Training Evaluations
- Rotation Specific In-Training Evaluation
Reports (Global Assessment of
Performance) CanMEDS format - Formative - face-to-face feedback
- Written Multiple Choice Questions (MCQ) Exam
- Oral / Clinical Exam
- Observed History and Physical Exam / Mock Oral
- Objective Structured Clinical Exam
- 360ยบ Evaluations
- Evaluation of Research / Quality Assurance
Projects - Learning Portfolios
7- Final In-Training Evaluation Report
- Certificate of Confirmation of Completion of
Training (CCT) - FITER - Summative - compilation CanMEDS roles
- STACER (Standardized Assessment of a Clinical
Encounter Report) - Observed History and Physical Examination
- two (2) observers / examiners, structured
check list - may be repeated until satisfactory performance
8- The Final Examination in Pediatrics
- A condensed, comprehensive three-part exam
- blue print systems based content CanMEDS
roles - Multiple Choice Questions (MCQ) Exam 150 / 3
hrs - Short Answer Questions (SAQ) 60 75 / 3 hrs
- Structured Oral Questions (OSCE) 10 X 15 mins
- - attempt to evaluate all CanMEDS roles
- - standardized patients history taking,
counseling - - parents and adolescents ( 12 years)
- - telephone advice stations
- - structured oral stations
- - physical examination stations (standardized
patients) - - pictures / videos
- - critical appraisal stations
- - reliability 0.80
9- The Final Examination in Pediatrics
- (Reflections after six years experience)
- Reliable all exams - reliability ? 0.80
- High face validity (credibility)
- High content validity
- Canadian trainees do very well
- Non-Canadian trainees much lower pass rate
- ? language, lack of basic skills, ? exam
experience, ? anxiety - Logistically time consuming, labour intensive
- 1 2 1 days in Ottawa
- 2 days paired stations, both English and
French - 3 sessions candidates sequestered to avoid
contacts - 35 examiners, 2006 170 candidates
10The question still is What should be the
standards of a practicing pediatrician in Canada
and how should these competencies be
evaluated? One Grade Only and That the Best!!
11Thank You Very Much for your Attention!! Any
Comments or Questions??
12- Maintenance of Competence
- a. Canadian Perspective 80 hours of continuing
education accredited CE based on adult learning
principles individual personal learning
projects accredited self-assessment
programs practice audits, practice reviews and
appraisal - b. USA Perspective
- evidence of professional standing
- evidence of life-long learning
- evidence of cognitive expertise
- evidence of satisfactory performance in Pediatrics
13- Physicians who have not
- Trained in Canada
- Only training in a limited number of specific
jurisdictions is accepted by the RCPSC. - Many immigrant physicians have not had the same
evaluations as Canadian residents. - It is difficult for immigrant physicians to get
further specialty training. - Some provincial licensing authorities (CPS) grant
temporary or restricted licenses to practice in
supervised setting provided that the physician
pass the RCPSC exams and complete a five year
cycle of Maintenance of Certification. - Pediatricians who have trained outside of Canada
have difficulties passing the RCPSC certification
exams.