BACKGROUND: The "BEEM" (best evidence in emergency medicine) rater scale was created for emergency physicians (EPs) to evaluate the physician-derived clinical relevance score of recently published, emergency medicine (EM)-related studies. BEEM therefore is designed to help make EPs aware of studies most likely to confirm or change current clinical practice. OBJECTIVES: The objective was to validate the BEEM rater score as a predictor of literature citation, using a bibliometric construct of clinical relevance to EM based on author-, document-, and journal-level measures (first and last author h-indices, number of authors including corporate and group authors, citations from date of publication to 2011, and journal impact factor scores) and study characteristics (design, category, and sample size). METHODS: Each month from 2007 through 2012, approximately 200 EPs from around the world voluntarily reviewed the titles and conclusions of recently published EM-related studies identified by BEEM faculty via the McMaster Health Information Research Unit. Using the BEEM rater scale, a reliable seven-item instrument that evaluates the clinical relevance of studies, raters independently assigned BEEM scores to approximately 10 to 20 articles each month. Two investigators independently abstracted the bibliometric indices for these articles. A citation rate for each article was calculated by dividing the Thomson Reuters Web of Science (WoS) total citation count by the number of years in publication. BEEM rater scores were correlated with the citation rate using Spearman's rho. The performance of the BEEM rater score was assessed for each article using negative binomial regression with composite citation count as the criterion standard, while controlling for other independent bibliometric variables in three models. RESULTS: The BEEM raters evaluated 605 articles with a mean (±SD) BEEM score of 3.84 (±0.7) and a median BEEM score of 3.85 (interquartile range = 3.38 to 4.30). Articles were primarily therapeutic (59%) and diagnostic (27%), with various designs, including 37% systematic reviews, 32% randomized controlled trials (RCTs), and 30% observational designs. The citation rate and BEEM rater score correlated positively (0.144), while the BEEM rater score and the Journal Citation Report (JCR) impact factor score were minimally correlated (0.053). In the first model, the BEEM rater score significantly predicted WoS citation rate (p < 0.0001) with an odds ratio (OR) of 1.24 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.106 to 1.402). In subsequent models adjusting for the JCR impact factor score, the h-indices of the first and last authors, number of authors, and study design, the BEEM rater score was not significant (p = 0.08). CONCLUSIONS: To the best of our knowledge, the BEEM rater score is the only known measure of clinical relevance. It has a high interrater reliability and face validity and correlates with future citations. Future research should assess this instrument against alternative constructs of clinical relevance.
BACKGROUND: The "BEEM" (best evidence in emergency medicine) rater scale was created for emergency physicians (EPs) to evaluate the physician-derived clinical relevance score of recently published, emergency medicine (EM)-related studies. BEEM therefore is designed to help make EPs aware of studies most likely to confirm or change current clinical practice. OBJECTIVES: The objective was to validate the BEEM rater score as a predictor of literature citation, using a bibliometric construct of clinical relevance to EM based on author-, document-, and journal-level measures (first and last author h-indices, number of authors including corporate and group authors, citations from date of publication to 2011, and journal impact factor scores) and study characteristics (design, category, and sample size). METHODS: Each month from 2007 through 2012, approximately 200 EPs from around the world voluntarily reviewed the titles and conclusions of recently published EM-related studies identified by BEEM faculty via the McMaster Health Information Research Unit. Using the BEEM rater scale, a reliable seven-item instrument that evaluates the clinical relevance of studies, raters independently assigned BEEM scores to approximately 10 to 20 articles each month. Two investigators independently abstracted the bibliometric indices for these articles. A citation rate for each article was calculated by dividing the Thomson Reuters Web of Science (WoS) total citation count by the number of years in publication. BEEM rater scores were correlated with the citation rate using Spearman's rho. The performance of the BEEM rater score was assessed for each article using negative binomial regression with composite citation count as the criterion standard, while controlling for other independent bibliometric variables in three models. RESULTS: The BEEM raters evaluated 605 articles with a mean (±SD) BEEM score of 3.84 (±0.7) and a median BEEM score of 3.85 (interquartile range = 3.38 to 4.30). Articles were primarily therapeutic (59%) and diagnostic (27%), with various designs, including 37% systematic reviews, 32% randomized controlled trials (RCTs), and 30% observational designs. The citation rate and BEEM rater score correlated positively (0.144), while the BEEM rater score and the Journal Citation Report (JCR) impact factor score were minimally correlated (0.053). In the first model, the BEEM rater score significantly predicted WoS citation rate (p < 0.0001) with an odds ratio (OR) of 1.24 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.106 to 1.402). In subsequent models adjusting for the JCR impact factor score, the h-indices of the first and last authors, number of authors, and study design, the BEEM rater score was not significant (p = 0.08). CONCLUSIONS: To the best of our knowledge, the BEEM rater score is the only known measure of clinical relevance. It has a high interrater reliability and face validity and correlates with future citations. Future research should assess this instrument against alternative constructs of clinical relevance.
Authors: Michelle Lin; Nikita Joshi; Andrew Grock; Anand Swaminathan; Eric J Morley; Jeremy Branzetti; Taku Taira; Felix Ankel; Lalena M Yarris Journal: J Grad Med Educ Date: 2016-05
Authors: Andrew Grock; Jaime Jordan; Fareen Zaver; Isabelle N Colmers-Gray; Keeth Krishnan; Teresa Chan; Brent Thoma; Charlotte Alexander; Mohammed Alkhalifah; Abdulaziz S Almehlisi; Saeed Alqahtani; Scott Anderson; Shelaina Anderson; Colin Andrews; Jocelyn Andruko; Nikytha Antony; Diptesh Aryal; Barbra Backus; Jennifer Baird; Andrew Baker; Sarah Batty; Jared Baylis; Braeden Beaumont; Chris Belcher; Brent Benavides; Michael Benham; Julian Botta; Elyse Berger Pelletier; Nicholas Bouchard; Victoria Brazil; Emily Brumfield; Anthony Bryson; Wisarut Bunchit; Kat Butler; Lindy Buzikievich; David Calcara; Rob Carey; Maria Rosa Carrillo; Stephen Carroll; Casey Lyons; Louise Cassidy; Kirsty Challen; Kathryn Chan; Tim Chaplin; Natasha Chatham-Zvelebil; Eric Chen; Lucy Chen; Sushant Chhabra; Alvin Chin; Eric Chochi; Tina Choudhri; Jeremy Christensen; Kimberly Connors; Veronica Coppersmith; Abby Cosgrove; Gregory Costello; Kevin Cullison; Andrew D'Alessandro; Kerstin Wit; Marie Decock; Rayan Delbani; William Denq; Julianna Deutscher; Brendan Devine; Maia Dorsett; Taylor Duda; Justin Dueweke; Teresa Dunphy; Sean Dyer; Karthryn T Eastley; Marcia Edmonds; Ken Edwards; Robert Ehrman; Youness Elkhalidy; Preston Fedor; Brian Ficiur; Caley Flynn; Bill Fraser; Meagan Fu; James Fukakusa; Eric Funk; Damjan Gaco; Viktor Gawlik; Kenn Ghaffarian; Laleh Gharahbaghian; Andrew Griffith; Phil Griffith; Tanner Gronowski; Cathy Grossman; Jaroslaw Gucwa; Pawan Gupta; Alexandra Gustafson; Andrew Guy; Mary Haas; Stanislaw Haciski; Emina Hajdinjak; Andrew K Hall; Regina Hammock; Jan Hansel; Alexander Hart; Larissa Hattin; Brandon Herb; SueLin Hilbert; Jeff Hill; Jesse Hill; Amy Ho; Emily House; Nina House; Simon York Ming Huang; James Huffman; Charlie Inboriboon; Alex Ireland; Ali Jamal; Mohammad Ali Jamil; Victor Jansen; Zach Jarou; Vivian Jia; Levi Johnston; Drew Kalnow; Puneet Kapur; Seth Kelly; Kyle Kelson; William Kent; Rishi Khakhkhar; Jaasmit Khurana; Ashley Kilp; Scott Knapp; Sebastian Kohler; Ivanna Kruhlak; Nadim Lalani; Samantha Lam; Patrick Lank; Zander Laurie; Kristina Lea; Ernest Leber; Ching-Hsing Lee; Haakon Lenes; Nilantha Lenora; Jesse Leontowicz; Kelly Lien; Michelle Lin; Yingchun Lin; Andrew Little; Harry Liu; Ivy Liu; Steve Liu; Stephanie Louka; Elise Lovell; David Lowe; Ashley Lubberdink; Jessica Luc; Sheng-Hsiang Ma; Hugh MacLeod; Nick Mancuso; Anali Maneshi; Jesse May; John Mayo; Mike McDonnell; Susan McLellan; Carolyn McQuarrie; Therese Mead; Cory Meeuwisse; Patrick Meloy; Perry Menzies; Anne Messman; Stephen Miazga; Logan Mills; Allan Mix; Steve Montag; Brendan Moore; Justin Morgenstern; Sarah Mott; P Mukherj; Ali Mulla; Sheena Nandalal; Taylor Nikel; Julia Nood; Sean Nugent; Morgan Oakland; Werner Oberholzer; Onyeka Otugo; Taofiq Segun Oyedokun; Alim Pardhan; Kinjal Patel; Quinten Paterson; Catherine Patocka; Christine Patterson; James Pearlman; Alexis Pelletier-Bui; Marc Phan; Zafrina Poonja; Aubrey Powell; Kamini Premkumar; Gregor Prosen; Vishal Puri; Tanis Quaife; Ryan Raffel; Ali Raja; Randi Ramunno; Louise Rang; Suzanne Rannazzisi; Shauna Regan; Salim R Rezaie; Milan Ridderikhof; Vanessa Rogers; Christine Roh; Keith Rosenberg; Marina Roure; Sherri Rudinsky; Joshua Rudner; Adeeb Saleh; Will Sanderson; Owen Scheirer; Paul Schofield; Paul Schunk; Evan Schwarz; Parisa Shahrabadi; Eric Shappell; Julia Sheffield; Manpreet Singh; Hector C Singson; Dave Slessor; Sam Smith; Paula Sneath; Robert Sobehart; Kerry Spearing; James Stempien; Britni Sternard; Tara Stratton; Katherine Stuart; Bob Stuntz; Michael Susalla; Colleen Sweeney; Loice Swisher; Henry Swoboda; Shahbaz Syed; Taku Taira; Nikhil Tambe; Richard Tang; Elisha Targonsky; Alan Taylor; Rachel Taylor; Todd Taylor; Paxton Ting; Gerhard Tiwald; Evelyn Tran; Kelvin Tran; Jason Trickovic; Paul Trinquero; Aaron Tyagi; Manrique Umana; Patrick Vallance; Patricia Van den Berg; Kelly van Diepen; Luis Vargas; Rene Verbeek; Sandra Viggers; Zlata Vlodaver; Matthew Wagner; Noorin Walji; Joe Walter; Miranda Wan; Rachel Wang; Gregory Wanner; Wyatt Warawa; Mike Ward; Jennifer Weekes; Kristen Weersink; Cara Weessies; Anna Whalen-Browne; Brian Whiteside; Matthew Willis; Jonas Wilmer; Nelson Wong; Mark Woodcroft; Rob Woods; Lawrence Yau; Jessica Yee; Calvin Yeh; Katherine Yurkiw; Fareen Zaver; Alexander Zozula Journal: AEM Educ Train Date: 2021-05-16
Authors: Teresa M Chan; Brent Thoma; Keeth Krishnan; Michelle Lin; Christopher R Carpenter; Matt Astin; Kulamakan Kulasegaram Journal: West J Emerg Med Date: 2016-07-26