| Literature DB >> 32354331 |
Laury P J W M de Jonge1, Ilse Mesters2, Marjan J B Govaerts3, Angelique A Timmerman4, Jean W M Muris4, Anneke W M Kramer5, Cees P M van der Vleuten3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Direct observation of clinical task performance plays a pivotal role in competency-based medical education. Although formal guidelines require supervisors to engage in direct observations, research demonstrates that trainees are infrequently observed. Supervisors may not only experience practical and socio-cultural barriers to direct observations in healthcare settings, they may also question usefulness or have low perceived self-efficacy in performing direct observations. A better understanding of how these multiple factors interact to influence supervisors' intention to perform direct observations may help us to more effectively implement the aforementioned guidelines and increase the frequency of direct observations.Entities:
Keywords: Assessor cognition; Attitude of health personnel; Clinical competence; Competency based medical education; Education, medical, graduate; Observations; Theory of planned behaviour; Workplace-based assessment and learning
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32354331 PMCID: PMC7193388 DOI: 10.1186/s12909-020-02047-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Fig. 1Extended* TPB model for the prediction of intention of supervisors to perform direct observations in the clinical workplace. *The original TPB model (in italics) is extended by the ‘Social pressure’,’ Modelling’ and ‘Past behaviour’ measures. **We performed these steps in the hierarchical regression analysis described in the Results section
Demographic variables of GP supervisors (N = 82)
| Demographic variable | N (%) |
|---|---|
| Maastricht | 49 (60) |
| Leiden | 33 (40) |
| 31–40 | 8 (10) |
| 41–50 | 33 (40) |
| 51–65 | 41 (50) |
| Male | 47 (57) |
| Female | 35 (43) |
| 6–10 years | 7 (9) |
| > 10 years | 75 (91) |
| 0–5 years | 23 (28) |
| 6–10 years | 33 (40) |
| > 10 years | 26 (32) |
Exploratory factor analysis of control beliefs in the TPB model
| Control beliefs | ||
|---|---|---|
| CB factor 1 | CB factor 2 | |
| I am busy | −.047 | |
| I am not feeling comfortable | −.031 | |
| Trainees have a specific question for feedback | .108 | |
| Trainees avoid direct observations | .265 | |
| Clear assessment criteria are available to perform direct observations | −.077 | |
| I feel the need to give a critical assessment | .266 | .211 |
| I am trained in performing direct observations | .405 | .259 |
| I have the feeling that performing direct observations is disturbing the contact between trainee and patients | .435 | .087 |
| I do not know what to assess | .048 | |
| I have the feeling that my roles as supervisor and assessor are in conflict | −.100 | |
| I have the feeling that a trainee experiences direct observations as an assessment | −.040 | |
| I have the feeling that I am confronted with shortcomings in my own consultations | .791 | −.111 |
*Significant factor loadings in bold
Correlation matrix and descriptive statistics for measures of the extended TPB model
| 1. | 2. | 3. | 4. | 5. | 6. | 7. | 8. | 9. | 10. | 11. | Mean | SD | Range | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Intention | 6.62 | .81 | 1–7 | |||||||||||
| 2. Behavioural beliefs | .43** | 5.03 | .70 | 1–7 | ||||||||||
| 3. Normative beliefs | .31** | .39** | 4.73 | 1.0 | 1–7 | |||||||||
| 4. Control beliefs (total) | .38** | .44** | .12 | 54.66 | 16.02 | 0–100 | ||||||||
| 5. CB factor 11 | .23* | .28** | .13 | .81** | 50.54 | 24.15 | 0–100 | |||||||
| 6. CB factor 22 | .42** | .49** | .06 | .76** | .32** | 54.66 | 18.35 | 0–100 | ||||||
| 7. Attitude | .32** | .47** | .23* | .22* | .05 | .38** | 5.33 | 1.31 | 1–7 | |||||
| 8. Subjective norms | .36** | .33** | .38** | .14 | .20 | .23* | .23* | 5.35 | 1.15 | 1–7 | ||||
| 9. Social pressure | .0 | .24* | .15 | −.10 | −.03 | −.22* | −35** | .21 | 3.40 | 1.77 | 1–7 | |||
| 10. Modelling | .08 | −.05 | .42** | −.08 | −.05 | −.12 | .02 | .17 | .09 | 4.83 | 1.16 | 1–7 | ||
| 11. PBC3 | .36** | .33** | −.04 | .33** | .06 | .56** | .33** | .10 | −37** | −.02 | 6.15 | .70 | 1–7 | |
| 12. Past behaviour | .37** | .09 | −.05 | −.01 | −.06 | .14 | .07 | .43** | .05 | .02 | .15 | 784 |
Numbers in the first horizontal row correspond with the numbers and labels in the first vertical column
1CB factor 1: control beliefs factor 1; 2CB factor 2: control beliefs factor 2; 3PBC: perceived behavioural control; 4% of supervisors performing more than three direct observations over the past three-month period; ** Correlation significant at 0.01 level;* Correlation significant at 0.05 level
Determinants of the intention to perform direct observations resulting from a hierarchical regression analysis (N = 82)
| Step | Determinants | R2 | R2change | Fchange | Standardised betas | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Step 1 | Step 2 | Step 3 | Step 4 | |||||
| 1. | .024 | .37 | ||||||
| Training institute | .01 | .44 | .08 | .10 | ||||
| Age | .02 | −.07 | −.03 | −.01 | ||||
| Gender | −.11 | −.12 | −.03 | −.04 | ||||
| Experience as GP | .08 | .17 | .11 | .11 | ||||
| Experience as supervisor | −.14 | −.06 | −.08 | −.07 | ||||
| 2. | .31 | .29 | 7.43** | |||||
| Behavioural beliefs | .18 | .12 | .11 | |||||
| Normative beliefs | .25* | .19 | .27* | |||||
| CB Factor 1 | .03 | .09 | .10 | |||||
| CB Factor 2 | .30* | .13 | .13 | |||||
| .37 | .08 | 1.21 | ||||||
| Attitude | .09 | .11 | ||||||
| Subjective norm | .14 | −.01 | ||||||
| Social pressure | .12 | .12 | ||||||
| Modelling | −.01 | −.01 | ||||||
| PBC1 | .26 | .22 | ||||||
| Past behaviour | .45 | .08 | 9.76** | .33** | ||||
1PBC: perceived behavioural control; ** correlation significant at 0.01 level;*correlation significant at 0.05 level