| Literature DB >> 31671286 |
Colleen Y Colbert1, Judith C French2, Alejandro C Arroliga3, S Beth Bierer1.
Abstract
Background: Despite recommendations from survey scientists, surveys appear to be utilized in medical education without the critical step of pretesting prior to survey launch. Pretesting helps ensure respondents understand questions as survey developers intended and that items and response options are relevant to respondents and adequately address constructs, topics, issues or problems. While psychometric testing is important in assessing aspects of question quality and item performance, it cannot discern how respondents, based upon their lived experiences, interpret the questions we pose.Aim: This audit study explored whether authors of medical education journal articles within audited journals reported pretesting survey instruments during survey development, as recommended by survey scientists and established guidelines/standards for survey instrument development.Entities:
Keywords: Audit; healthcare; pretesting; questionnaire; questionnaire methodology; survey methodology; survey validation
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31671286 PMCID: PMC6830238 DOI: 10.1080/10872981.2019.1673596
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Educ Online ISSN: 1087-2981
Definitions and descriptions.
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Pretesting | Pretesting, which occurs prior to pilot testing, refers to a variety of methods designed to assess survey quality and the question-response process ( |
| Field testing or field trials | Field testing allows researchers to assess aspects of survey administration in the field, prior to piloting and survey launch [ |
| Pilot testing | Pilot testing occurs |
| Cognitive testing or interviews | Cognitive testing or interviewing refers to a range of methods used to probe individual cognitive response processes and relies on capturing feedback about item comprehensibility from respondents who are similar to one’s target population [ |
| Focus groups | Focus groups are used across a range of disciplines, including, but not limited to, educational, sociological and healthcare research, business/marketing, and political science. Focus groups are used to explore how people think or feel about an issue through guided group discussion. In research studies, participants are typically selected based upon shared characteristics as they relate to the study topic. See Krueger & Casey [ |
| Behavioral Coding | Behavioral coding is primarily used with interviewer-led surveys and is a systematic method for exploring both interviewer and respondent behaviors in live or telephone interviews [ |
| Expert feedback and expert panels | Feedback from individual experts or expert panels on content and questionnaire design is frequently used to ensure that appropriate content is covered by items [ |
| Survey or questionnaire appraisal tools | A type of standardized evaluation form, the questionnaire appraisal tool is completed by respondents and/or experts who typically first take the survey and then use the appraisal tool to evaluate item and instrument quality, providing information on item specificity, clarity and whether questions are leading [ |
| Other methods | For other techniques common in pretesting interviewer-led surveys (e.g., behavior coding of interview transcripts), see Blake [ |
Figure 1.Data extraction form sample.
Audit data for a sample of medical education journals publishing survey articles from 2014 to 2015.
| New instruments used | Existing instruments used | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Journals Reviewed | Audience (National, International) | Number of survey articles publisheda | Pretesting not reported (%) | Pretesting reportedb | Pretesting not reported (%) | Pretesting reported |
aNumber of survey methodology articles published during time 2-year period (of 251).
bAny description which explicitly stated testing/pretesting of surveys/survey items had occurred or described steps in pretesting.
cImpact factors reported on journal web sites for 2015.