Mark R Lafave1, Larry Katz. 1. Department of Physical Education and Recreation Studies, Mount Royal University, Calgary, AB, Canada.
Abstract
CONTEXT: Health care professions have replaced traditional multiple choice tests or essays with structured and practical, performance-based examinations with the hope of eliminating rater bias and measuring clinical competence. OBJECTIVE: To establish the validity and reliability of the Standardized Orthopedic Assessment Tool (SOAT) as a measure of clinical competence of orthopaedic injury evaluation. DESIGN: Descriptive laboratory study. SETTING: University. PATIENTS OR OTHER PARTICIPANTS: A total of 60 undergraduate students and 11 raters from 3 Canadian universities and 1 standardized patient. INTERVENTION(S): Students were required to complete a 30-minute musculoskeletal evaluation in 1 of 2 randomly assigned mock scenarios involving the knee (second-degree medial collateral ligament sprain) or the shoulder (third-degree supraspinatus muscle strain). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): We measured interreliability with an intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) (2,k) and stability of the tool with standard error of measurement and confidence intervals. Agreement was measured using Bland-Altman plots. Concurrent validity was measured using a Pearson product moment correlation coefficient whereby the raters' global rating of a student was matched to the cumulative mean grade score. RESULTS: The ICCs were 0.75 and 0.82 for the shoulder and knee cases, respectively. Bland-Altman plots indicated no systematic bias between raters. In addition, Pearson product moment correlation analysis demonstrated a strong relationship between the overall cumulative mean grade score and the global rating score of the examinees' performances. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrated good interrater reliability of the SOAT with a standard error of measurement that indicated very modest stability, strong agreement between raters, and correlation indicative of concurrent validity.
CONTEXT: Health care professions have replaced traditional multiple choice tests or essays with structured and practical, performance-based examinations with the hope of eliminating rater bias and measuring clinical competence. OBJECTIVE: To establish the validity and reliability of the Standardized Orthopedic Assessment Tool (SOAT) as a measure of clinical competence of orthopaedic injury evaluation. DESIGN: Descriptive laboratory study. SETTING: University. PATIENTS OR OTHER PARTICIPANTS: A total of 60 undergraduate students and 11 raters from 3 Canadian universities and 1 standardized patient. INTERVENTION(S): Students were required to complete a 30-minute musculoskeletal evaluation in 1 of 2 randomly assigned mock scenarios involving the knee (second-degree medial collateral ligament sprain) or the shoulder (third-degree supraspinatus muscle strain). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): We measured interreliability with an intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) (2,k) and stability of the tool with standard error of measurement and confidence intervals. Agreement was measured using Bland-Altman plots. Concurrent validity was measured using a Pearson product moment correlation coefficient whereby the raters' global rating of a student was matched to the cumulative mean grade score. RESULTS: The ICCs were 0.75 and 0.82 for the shoulder and knee cases, respectively. Bland-Altman plots indicated no systematic bias between raters. In addition, Pearson product moment correlation analysis demonstrated a strong relationship between the overall cumulative mean grade score and the global rating score of the examinees' performances. CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrated good interrater reliability of the SOAT with a standard error of measurement that indicated very modest stability, strong agreement between raters, and correlation indicative of concurrent validity.
Entities:
Keywords:
clinical competence; health professionals; psychometrics
Authors: Michael J Griesser; Matthew C Beran; David C Flanigan; Michael Quackenbush; Corey Van Hoff; Julie Y Bishop Journal: J Surg Educ Date: 2011-09-25 Impact factor: 2.891