Rachel Yudkowsky1, Adnan Alseidi, José Cintron. 1. Department of Medical Education, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60612, USA. rachely@uic.edu
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) has challenged program directors to assess their residents' core competencies, including communication and interpersonal skills (CIS). We report our institution's experience using a series of standardized patient encounters in an objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) to evaluate CIS in surgical residents. METHODS: Standardized patients rated the residents' ability to maintain a patient-centered approach across 6 challenging communication tasks. Residents received verbal feedback from the patients after each encounter and completed a survey indicating their experience and comfort with each task. Individual and group reports documented resident competency and provided aggregate information for curriculum review. Formal grades were not assigned. RESULTS: Twenty-two residents in 2 surgical residency programs piloted the assessment. The Generalizability of the assessment was 0.81. Scores of second- and third-year residents were not significantly different. Residents found the program to be helpful and able to assess their skills. CONCLUSIONS: The standardized patient-based OSCE is an effective method to assess communication and interpersonal skills and provides useful information for curriculum review.
OBJECTIVE: The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) has challenged program directors to assess their residents' core competencies, including communication and interpersonal skills (CIS). We report our institution's experience using a series of standardized patient encounters in an objective structured clinical examination (OSCE) to evaluate CIS in surgical residents. METHODS: Standardized patients rated the residents' ability to maintain a patient-centered approach across 6 challenging communication tasks. Residents received verbal feedback from the patients after each encounter and completed a survey indicating their experience and comfort with each task. Individual and group reports documented resident competency and provided aggregate information for curriculum review. Formal grades were not assigned. RESULTS: Twenty-two residents in 2 surgical residency programs piloted the assessment. The Generalizability of the assessment was 0.81. Scores of second- and third-year residents were not significantly different. Residents found the program to be helpful and able to assess their skills. CONCLUSIONS: The standardized patient-based OSCE is an effective method to assess communication and interpersonal skills and provides useful information for curriculum review.
Authors: Tim Dwyer; Susan Glover Takahashi; Melissa Kennedy Hynes; Jodi Herold; David Wasserstein; Markku Nousiainen; Peter Ferguson; Veronica Wadey; M Lucas Murnaghan; Tim Leroux; John Semple; Brian Hodges; Darrell Ogilvie-Harris Journal: Can J Surg Date: 2014-08 Impact factor: 2.089