| Literature DB >> 26594281 |
Meghan Schott1, Raashee Kedia2, Susan B Promes1, Thomas Swoboda3, Kevin O'Rourke4, Walter Green5, Rachel Liu6, Brent Stansfield7, Sally A Santen7.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Emergency medicine (EM) milestones are used to assess residents' progress. While some milestone validity evidence exists, there is a lack of standardized tools available to reliably assess residents. Inherent to this is a concern that we may not be truly measuring what we intend to assess. The purpose of this study was to design a direct observation milestone assessment instrument supported by validity and reliability evidence. In addition, such a tool would further lend validity evidence to the EM milestones by demonstrating their accurate measurement.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26594281 PMCID: PMC4651585 DOI: 10.5811/westjem.2015.9.27270
Source DB: PubMed Journal: West J Emerg Med ISSN: 1936-900X
Three major soures of test validity.6
| Definition | Validity evidence for instrument | |
|---|---|---|
| Content | The extent to which test content and the construct of interest are matched. Evidence of content validity may include test blueprint to match content to construct, the use of experts in the field, literature and guidelines (e.g., milestones) to determine content match with construct. | 1) Using language from the milestones, 2) Involving an expert panel of EM residency leaders from six academic institutions, 3) Using a modified Delphi approach, and 4) Utilizing an assessment blueprint based on a review of each of the EM ACGME sub-competencies and determining the appropriateness of each for incorporation into the direct assessment tool |
| Response process | The cognitive and physical processes required by the assessment also represent the construct. Decisions for response process validity include: the choice for global score versus checklist; analysis of individual responses; debriefing of respondents; and quality assurance and control of assessment data. | 1) Explicit scoring algorithms directly related to the underlying construct, 2) By the judgments of the experts regarding the scoring, 3) Adjustment of scoring responses, 4) Field testing and revision |
| Internal structure | Assessment content and processes provide data about learner performance relevant to the construct. Internal process refers to how assessment transforms the data into a score that represents the construct. Evidence of internal structure includes: statistical characteristics of items and option functions; factor analysis. | *Reliability of reproducibility of scores |
EM, emergency medicine; ACGME, Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education
Figure 1Fleiss kappa for checklist critical care direct observation tool items.
Figure 2Intra-class correlations for sub-competency milestone level CDOT.
CDOT, Critical Care Direct Observation Tool