Title: Assessing Clinical Competence A Satellite View
1Assessing Clinical CompetenceA Satellite View
- University of Saskatchewan
- April 24 2007
2Professor Gordon PageFaculty of
MedicineUniversity of British Columbia
Vancouver Canada
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4CLINICAL COMPETENCE
Knowledge
Skills
Attitudes
Effective Patient Care
Newble, 2000
5Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of
Canada -- CanMEDS Competencies
- Medical Expert
- Communicator
- Scholar
- Collaborator
- Manager
- Health Advocate
- Professional
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7CLINICAL COMPETENCE
Knowledge
Skills
Attitudes
Effective Patient Care
Newble, 2000
8Why Focus on Knowledge?
- Norcini (ASME, 2003) -- Of all assessment
techniques, knowledge test scores have shown to
be the best predictors of future clinical
performance and of clinical outcomes. -
Tamblyn et al (JAMA, 2002,1998)
licensing/certification examination scores in
Canada show sustained relationships with
effectiveness indices of preventive care and
acute and chronic disease management
9Clinical Competence and Knowledge
- Knowledge a cornerstone of clinical competence
10Outline of Presentation
- In tests of knowledge, what should we test?
- What features of written tests contribute to
their effectiveness in assessing clinical
competence? - What are the emerging trends in assessing
clinical performance
11Outline of Presentation
- In tests of knowledge, what should we test?
- What features of written tests contribute to
their effectiveness in assessing clinical
competence? - What are the emerging trends in assessing
clinical performance
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13Clinical Decision-Making
Reduced
(empty mind)
Dispersed
(cluttered mind)
Elaborated
(deductive thinker)
Compiled
(recall/recognition)
(Bordage, G. Academic Medicine, 1994, 1999)
14Clinical Decision-Making
Reduced
(empty mind)
Dispersed
(cluttered mind)
Elaborated
(deductive thinker)
Compiled
(recall/recognition)
(Bordage, G. Academic Medicine, 1994, 1999)
15In assessing clinical competence, what should we
examine?
- Application of knowledge
- Not recall of knowledge
- Not thoroughness of data gathering
- In early training, clinical reasoning
(elaborated thinking -- application of basic
sciences knowledge) - In later training, clinical decision making
- Key steps in the resolution of clinical problems
16Application of Knowledge?
- Mrs. Hamada is a 62 year old woman who has a
herniated disc in her cervical spine. - What would you expect to find on your examination
of Mrs. Hamada? - What symptoms would you expect Mrs. Hamada to be
experiencing?
17A 63-year-old diabetic is seen in the emergency
department with a 24 hour history of right loin
pain. His abdomen is soft and urinalysis shows
blood. Which one of the following is the MOST
APPROPRIATE IMAGING INVESTIGATION to
arrange? A. Ultrasound of the
abdomen. B.(Y) Computed tomography (CT) scan
of the abdomen. C. Right retrograde
pyelogram. D. Intravenous pyelogram. E. Plain
abdominal radiograph.
Application of Knowledge?
18Recall vs Application
Top-Down
Bottom-Up
Problem
Problem
?
?
Clinical Features
Clinical Features
19Outline of Presentation
- In tests of knowledge, what should we test?
- What features of written tests contribute to
their effectiveness in assessing clinical
competence? - What are the emerging trends in assessing
clinical performance
20Test of Factual Recall
What is the most likely renal abnormality in
children with nephrotic syndrome and normal renal
function?
acute poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis
(A)
hemolytic-uremic syndrome
(B)
minimal change nephrotic syndrome
(C)
nephrotic syndrome due to focal and segmental
glomerulosclerosis
(D)
Schönlein-Henoch purpura with nephritis
(E)
Case SM, Swanson DB. Constructing Written Test
Questions for the Basic and Clinical Sciences,
1996. Page 58-9.
21Same Question, using a brief case description
A 2-year-old boy has a 1-week history of edema.
Blood pressure is 100/60 mm Hg, and there is
generalized edema and ascites. Serum
concentrations are creatinine 0.4 mg/dL, albumin
1.4 g/dL, and cholesterol 569 mg/dL. Urinalysis
shows 4 protein and no blood. What is the most
likely diagnosis?
22Same question, using a longer case description
A 2-year-old black child developed swelling of
his eyes and ankles over the past week. Blood
pressure is 100/60 mm Hg, pulse 110/min, and
respirations 28/min. In addition to swelling of
his eyes and 2 pitting edema of his ankles, he
has abdominal distension with a positive fluid
wave. Serum concentrations are creatinine 0.4
mg/dL, albumin 1.4 g/dL, and cholesterol 569
mg/dL. Urinalysis shows 4 protein and no blood.
23Non Vignette
What is the most likely renal abnormality in
children with nephrotic syndrome and normal renal
function?
acute poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis
(A)
hemolytic-uremic syndrome
(B)
minimal change nephrotic syndrome
(C)
nephrotic syndrome due to focal and segmental
glomerulosclerosis
(D)
Schönlein-Henoch purpura with nephritis
(E)
Short Vignette
A 2-year-old boy has a 1-week history of edema.
Blood pressure is 100/60 mm Hg, and there is
generalized edema and ascites. Serum
concentrations are creatinine 0.4 mg/dL, albumin
1.4 g/dL, and cholesterol 569 mg/dL. Urinalysis
shows 4 protein and no blood. What is the most
likely diagnosis?
Long Vignette
A 2-year-old black child developed swelling of
his eyes and ankles over the past week. Blood
pressure is 100/60 mm Hg, pulse 110/min, and
respirations 28/min. In addition to swelling of
his eyes and 2 pitting edema of his ankles, he
has abdominal distension with a positive fluid
wave. Serum concentrations are creatinine 0.4
mg/dL, albumin 1.4 g/dL, and cholesterol 569
mg/dL. Urinalysis shows 4 protein and no blood.
24Discrimination is it affected by the
authenticity of the question stem?
What is the most likely renal abnormality in
children with nephrotic syndrome and normal renal
function?
A B C D E 1 0 99 0 0 8 1 90 1 0
Overall P-Value 94
A 2-year-old boy has a 1-week history of edema.
Blood pressure is 100/60 mm Hg, and there is
generalized edema and ascites. Serum
concentrations are creatinine 0.4 mg/dL, albumin
1.4 g/dL, and cholesterol 569 mg/dL. Urinalysis
shows 4 protein and no blood. What is the most
likely diagnosis?
0 0 98 2 0 5 2 82 8 1
88
A 2-year-old black child developed swelling of
his eyes and ankles over the past week. Blood
pressure is 100/60 mm Hg, pulse 110/min, and
respirations 28/min. In addition to swelling of
his eyes and 2 pitting edema of his ankles, he
has abdominal distension with a positive fluid
wave. Serum concentrations are creatinine 0.4
mg/dL, albumin 1.4 g/dL, and cholesterol 569
mg/dL. Urinalysis shows 4 protein and no blood.
0 1 98 1 0 10 9 66 10 5
84
Case SM, Swanson DB. Constructing Written Test
Questions for the Basic and Clinical Sciences,
1996. Page 58-9.
25Does the format of question (e.g., MCQ, short
answer) affect its ability to effectively
identify students at different levels of clinical
competence?
26Discrimination a function of the number of
options?
PERCENT OF STUDENTS
PERCENT CORRECT SCORE
27Free Response vs Selected Response Scores
MCC/RACGP
28Length of Tests and Numbers of Questions?
29Case Specificity
Problem 1
30Case Specificity
- Inter-case correlation .1 - .3
- Each case presents unique challenges (Arthritis ?
Anemia ? Crohns ? Diabetes)
31Reliability of Test Scores
Domain of Competence
?
?
32Reliability as a function of testing time
1Norcini et al., 1985 2Stalenhoef-Halling et al.,
1990 3Swanson, 1987
4Was et al., under editorial review 5Newble
Swanson, 1987 6Ram et al., 1999
33Conclusions For written examinations to
effectively assess clinical competence, they
should
- Test the (bottom-up) application of knowledge in
the context of authentic, high-fidelity
clinical challenges which replicate as closely as
possible what clinicians are challenged to do in
their clinical practice - Make use of question formats that accurately
discriminate among examinees at varying levels of
competence (e.g., more options, short answer) - Adequately and representatively sample the domain
of competence of interest
34Outline of Presentation
- In tests of knowledge, what should we test?
- What features of written tests contribute to
their effectiveness in assessing clinical
competence? - What are the emerging trends in assessing
clinical performance?
35Clinical Performance Assessment
- OSCEs (standardized patients, skills stations, )
- Long and short cases (ideally observe trainee
with a patient) - In-training assessment forms
- Mini Clinical Evaluation Exercise (Mini-CEX)
- Case-based discussion
- Direct Observation of Procedural Skills (DOPS)
36A Story of Performance Assessment Since 1970
- Disenchantment with (long and short case) oral
examinations/professional judgment of examiners
notoriously unreliable scores - Development of the OSCE the same set (and
larger numbers) of simulated cases for all
examinees, objective checklists for scoring
better reliability of scores
37Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE)
- Many (10-20) stations students rotate from
station to station - In each station, students take a history from,
examine, or counsel a Standardized patient a
person trained to simulate a patient - Students performance is observed by a faculty
member - Check lists and rating forms are used to assess
students performance
38A 30-Year Story of Performance Assessment
- Increased reliability of scores from OSCEs shown
to be a function of better sampling across cases
and not of the objective checklists. - Global ratings (professional judgments) on OSCEs
shown to provide more reliable scores than
checklist scores
39A 30-Year Story of Performance Assessment
- Global ratings on less structured/less
standardized assessments also now shown to
possess reliability comparable to OSCEs, for
similar testing times.
40A 30-Year Story of Performance Assessment
- Conclusions
- Sampling across cases, not objectivity provided
by checklists, is the main contributor to better
reliability (accuracy) of scores - Global (professional) judgements, in contrast to
checklist scores, seem to be more reliable. - Reliable, formal assessment in real clinical
situations is both achievable and desirable.
41Observing Trainees in Real Patient Encounters
- Is a more authentic method of assessing many
components of clinical competence - Should be included as a component of the clinical
curriculum - Is an addition to, not a substitute for
examinations (e.g., OSCEs) - Can employ short and long case formats, or a
Mini-CEX
42Mini-Clinical Evaluation Exercise (Mini-CEX)
- 10-20 minute exercise
- Observation of a trainee performing a specific
task with a patient - Accompanied by a rating form eliciting judgements
re history, physical, communication,
diagnostic/management conclusions, professional
behaviour, - Designed to contribute to summative assessment
(think of as an OSCE station) and to provide
immediate, specific feedback to trainee
43UBC Department of Medicine Mini CEX Assessment
Form  EVALUATOR DATE __RESIDENT
____________________ PATIENT PROBLEM/DX
AGE GENDER PROBLEM COMPLEXITY
LOW MODERATE HIGH Â 1. MEDICAL
INTERVIEWING SKILLS ( Not Observed) 1 2 3
4 5 6 7 8 9
Unsatisfactory Satisfactory
Superior 2. PHYSICAL EXAMINATION SKILLS
( Not Observed)Â 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 Unsatisfactory
Satisfactory Superior  3.
PROFESSIONALISM/ HUMANISTIC QUALITIESÂ 1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 Â 4. CLINICAL
JUDGMENT ( Not Observed)Â 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 Unsatisfactory
Satisfactory Superior  5.
ORGANIZATION/EFFICIENCYÂ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 Unsatisfactory
Satisfactory Superior  OVERALL
CLINICAL COMPETENCE Â 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 Unsatisfactory
Satisfactory
Superior  Grade the residents performance Fail B
orderline Pass
44Reliability of the Mini-CEX Overall Clinical
Competence Ratings
45Reliability of ITER Average Composite Ratings
46Mini-CEX Study Results
- Correlations between
- Mini-CEX and MCQ scores .335
- Mini-CEX and OSCE scores .372
- Mini-CEX and ITER scores .724
- Mini-CEX and 360 (overall) .570
47Conclusions For a performance assessment system
to effectively assess clinical competence, it
should
- Include observations and ratings of performance
with real patients authentic assessment - Be based on an adequate sample of performance
case specificity - Employ several different methods (OSCE, ITER,
long case, mini-CEX, ) do not rely on one
method only
48Summary In assessing clinical competence, What
are some key themes?
- Test application, not recall
- Focus on key features, not thoroughness
- Present authentic clinical challenges (real
data, clinical decision-making) - Use discriminating question formats
- Ensure adequate sampling
- Observe performance with real patients
- Employ multiple methods
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