BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the reliability and acceptance of the mini-Clinical Evaluation Exercise (mini-CEX) as an assessment of practicing primary care physicians. METHOD: Six raters were recruited to conduct the assessments. After a training session, their ability to discriminate between levels of performance was evaluated using videotaped clinical scenarios. Fifteen physicians were assessed in an office setting by the raters who scored multiple clinical encounters using a validated mini-CEX form for each encounter. Participants were given a postassessment survey regarding the process. RESULTS: Raters distinguished between performance levels on the videotaped scenarios (P < .001). A total of 188 physician-patient interactions were assessed. The generalizability coefficient for 10 encounters was 0.92. In the postassessment survey, the raters (94%) and physicians assessed (75%) both felt that the mini-CEX is an acceptable assessment. CONCLUSIONS: The mini-CEX seems to be a reliable and acceptable instrument for the assessment of practicing physicians.
BACKGROUND: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the reliability and acceptance of the mini-Clinical Evaluation Exercise (mini-CEX) as an assessment of practicing primary care physicians. METHOD: Six raters were recruited to conduct the assessments. After a training session, their ability to discriminate between levels of performance was evaluated using videotaped clinical scenarios. Fifteen physicians were assessed in an office setting by the raters who scored multiple clinical encounters using a validated mini-CEX form for each encounter. Participants were given a postassessment survey regarding the process. RESULTS: Raters distinguished between performance levels on the videotaped scenarios (P < .001). A total of 188 physician-patient interactions were assessed. The generalizability coefficient for 10 encounters was 0.92. In the postassessment survey, the raters (94%) and physicians assessed (75%) both felt that the mini-CEX is an acceptable assessment. CONCLUSIONS: The mini-CEX seems to be a reliable and acceptable instrument for the assessment of practicing physicians.
Authors: Alison Fielding; Benjamin Eric Mundy; Amanda Tapley; Linda Klein; Sarah Gani; Michael Bentley; Rachael Boland; Lina Zbaidi; Mieke L van Driel; Elizabeth Holliday; Parker Magin Journal: BMJ Open Date: 2021-04-09 Impact factor: 2.692