| Literature DB >> 30665274 |
Silas Taylor1, Matthew Haywood1, Boaz Shulruf1,2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Optimal methods for communication skills training (CST) is an active area for research but the effect on communication performance in objective structured clinical examinations (OSCE) has not been so closely studied. Student role play (RP) for CST is common whilst volunteer simulated patient (SP) CST is cost-effective and provides authentic interactions. We assessed whether our volunteer SP CST improved OSCE performance compared to our previous RP strategy.Entities:
Keywords: Australia; Clinical Competence; Communication; Medical; Patient Simulation; Students; Volunteers
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30665274 PMCID: PMC6447758 DOI: 10.3352/jeehp.2019.16.3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Educ Eval Health Prof ISSN: 1975-5937
Objective structured clinical examination assessment criteria for University of New South Wales Medicine program
| Assess the student's ability to: | Mark–circle one grade for each | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Initiate and end the consultation: greet patient, introduce self, outline agenda, seek permission to proceed, thank the patient, and offer help with repositioning, dressing, etc. | F | P- | P | P+ |
| Fail | Borderline | Pass | Exceptional | |
| 2. Listen attentively, engage patient, and maintain respect: allow patient to use his or her own words without premature interruption, use open and closed questions, reflect important feelings, pick up verbal and non-verbal cues, display sensitivity to patient’s needs, respect boundaries, and gain patient’s trust | F | P- | P | P+ |
| Fail | Borderline | Pass | Exceptional | |
| 3. Elicit a relevant clinical history: establish reason for presentation, course and nature of symptoms; summarise patient’s symptoms to check understanding | F | P- | P | P+ |
| Fail | Borderline | Pass | Exceptional | |
| 4. Elicit a psychosocial history: ask patient about relevant family, social support, cultural, lifestyle factors, employment issue, as appropriate | F | P- | P | P+ |
| Fail | Borderline | Pass | Exceptional | |
| 5. Gather relevant past medical and family history: ask about past personal and family history, as well as specific risk factor history where appropriate | F | P- | P | P+ |
| Fail | Borderline | Pass | Exceptional | |
| 6. Communicate with patient and ensure patient comfort when conducting a physical examination/skill: explain to patient what is being done, provide suitable instructions, and ensure the patient’s privacy and comfort | F | P- | P | P+ |
| Fail | Borderline | Pass | Exceptional | |
| 7. Perform technically competent physical examination or skill (1): correct positioning of patient, adept with equipment, competent approach to examination | F | P- | P | P+ |
| Fail | Borderline | Pass | Exceptional | |
| 8. Perform technically competent physical examination or skill (2): correct positioning of patient, adept with equipment, competent approach to examination | F | P- | P | P+ |
| Fail | Borderline | Pass | Exceptional | |
| 9. Summarise case findings: should use medical jargon, identify patient’s key concerns and reason for presenting and summarise relevant history and examination findings | F | P- | P | P+ |
| Fail | Borderline | Pass | Exceptional | |
Adapted generic assessment descriptors used in the University of New South Wales Medicine program
| Grade | F | P- | P | P+ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Explanation of grade | The student misunderstood the assessment requirements, or failed to address the most important aspects. This grade represents a clear and substantial failure. | Addresses the assessment criteria at a standard that is barely satisfactory for students at that stage of the program. This grade represents a low or conceded pass. | Addresses the assessment criteria at a standard that is satisfactory for students at that stage of the program. One or two aspects may not be well done, but the standard is still considered to be satisfactory and this grade covers both pass and credit performances | Addresses the assessment criteria at a standard that exceeds what is normally considered satisfactory for students at that stage of the program—high distinction. |
Comparison of cohorts by admission and OSCE scores (t-test)
| Variable | Year | No. of participants | Mean± standard deviation | SE | Significance | Mean difference | t-value | SE difference | 95% Confidence interval | Cohen's d |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age (yr) | 2014 | 182 | 19.87±0.74 | 0.055 | 0.204 | 0.14 | -1.363 | 0.103 | -0.342 to 0.062 | 0.19 |
| 2016 | 148 | 20.01±1.12 | 0.092 | |||||||
| Undergraduate Medicine and Health Sciences | 2014 | 182 | 64.39±7.19 | 0.533 | 0.014 | -1.78 | 2.481 | 0.715 | 0.368 to 3.183 | -0.25 |
| Admission Test | 2016 | 148 | 62.61±5.80 | 0.477 | ||||||
| Australian Tertiary Admission Rank | 2014 | 182 | 99.15±1.51 | 0.112 | 0.059 | -0.37 | 1.895 | 0.197 | -0.014 to 0.759 | -0.25 |
| 2016 | 148 | 98.78±1.96 | 0.161 | |||||||
| Interview | 2014 | 182 | 87.01±9.72 | 0.720 | 0.713 | 0.41 | -0.368 | 1.107 | -2.585 to 1.770 | 0.04 |
| 2016 | 148 | 87.42±10.34 | 0.850 | |||||||
| Generic Comm | 2014 | 182 | 73.85±4.61 | 0.342 | 0.001 | 1.69 | -3.394 | 0.498 | -2.669 to -0.710 | 0.37 |
| 2016 | 148 | 75.54±4.35 | 0.358 | |||||||
| Clinical Comm | 2014 | 182 | 72.53±4.68 | 0.347 | <0.0001 | 2.08 | -4.317 | 0.483 | -3.033 to -1.134 | 0.45 |
| 2016 | 148 | 74.62±3.93 | 0.323 | |||||||
| Physical examination/procedural skills | 2014 | 182 | 70.64±5.52 | 0.409 | 0.001 | 1.98 | -3.378 | 0.587 | -3.138 to -0.828 | 0.36 |
| 2016 | 148 | 72.62±5.03 | 0.413 | |||||||
| OSCE total | 2014 | 182 | 72.70±4.26 | 0.316 | <0.0001 | 1.89 | -4.169 | 0.452 | -2.776 to -0.996 | 0.44 |
| 2016 | 148 | 74.58±3.86 | 0.317 |
OSCE, objective structured clinical examination; SE, standard error; Comm, communication.
OSCE scores (total and by domain) by cohort (estimated marginal means)
| Variable | Year | Mean±standard error | 95% Confidence interval | Cohen's d |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Generic Comm | 2014 | 73.93±0.328 | 73.28-74.57 | 0.26 |
| 2016 | 75.45±0.365 | 74.73-76.17 | ||
| Clinical Comm | 2014 | 72.57±0.326 | 71.92-73.21 | 0.34 |
| 2016 | 74.58±0.362 | 73.87-75.29 | ||
| Physical examination/procedural skills | 2014 | 70.67±0.395 | 69.89-71.44 | 0.28 |
| 2016 | 72.64±0.448 | 71.76-73.52 | ||
| OSCE total | 2014 | 72.75±0.302 | 72.15-73.34 | 0.32 |
| 2016 | 74.52±0.336 | 73.86-75.18 |
The covariates appearing in the model were evaluated with the following values: age (yr)=19.93, Undergraduate Medicine and Health Sciences Admission Test=63.61, Australian Tertiary Admission Rank=98.98, and interview=87.23.
OSCE, objective structured clinical examination; Comm, communication.