| Literature DB >> 34866545 |
John David Ike1, Joel Howell2.
Abstract
The authors conduct a narrative review of the quantitative observation metrics and psychometric scales utilized in the visual arts and medical education literature in order to provide medical educators with a 'toolkit' of quantitative metrics with which to design and evaluate novel visual arts-based pedagogies. These efforts are intended to support the AAMC and National Academy of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine's aims to formally evaluate and integrate arts and humanities curricula into traditional scientific educational programming. The scales reviewed examine a variety of domains including tolerance for ambiguity, bias, burnout, communication, empathy, grit, and mindfulness/reflection. Observation skill, given the heterogeneity of quantitative metrics, is reviewed separately.Entities:
Keywords: Medical education; curriculum development; medical humanities; observation skill; visual arts
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 34866545 PMCID: PMC8648010 DOI: 10.1080/10872981.2021.2010299
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Med Educ Online ISSN: 1087-2981
Observation Scales and Measurements used to Assess Visual Arts Programming
| Quantitative Observation Metrics | Visual Arts-Based Studies |
|---|---|
| Number of observations(± prespecified grading rubric) | (1) Dolev et al. 2001 – Pre-/post-testanalysis of clinical images gradedon a 9 or 10-point rubric. (2) Naghshineh et al. 2008 – Pre-/post-test analysis of patient photographs and artistic images usinga prespecified rubric. A qualitativeanalysis of image descriptions wasalso undertaken. (3) Klugman et al. 2011 – Pre-/post-testanalysis of clinical and artisticimages by word count and numberof observations. (4) Jasani et al. 2013 – Pre-/post-testanalysis of patient photographs bynumber of observations.A qualitative analysis of imagedescriptions was also undertaken. (5) Klugman et al. 2014 – Pre-/post-testanalysis of clinical images by wordcount and number of observations. (6) Huang et al. 2016 – Pre-/post-testanalysis of artistic and dermatologicimages by number of observations. (7) Gurwin et al. 2017 – Pre-/post-testanalysis of clinical and visual artimages. Clinical images were gradedon a prespecified rubric. Visual artimages were subjectively awardedpoints for observations,associations,interpretations, flexibility, andempathizing (no prespecifiedrubric). (8) Goodman et al. 2017 – Pre-/post-test analysis of radiographic imagesgraded on prespecified rubrics. (9) Agarwal et al. 2020 – Pre-/post-testanalysis of clinical images by wordcount and time spent analyzing each image. A qualitativeanalysis of image descriptions was alsounderta ken. |
Psychometric Scales Utilized to Assess Visual Arts Programming (All domains were evaluated using Likert Scales)
| Domain | Psychometric Scale | Means Assessed | Visual Arts-based Studies Utilizing Scale(s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Modified Tolerance for Ambiguity Scale (TFA) | A 7-item questionnaire that measures an individual’s comfort (or discomfort) with ambiguity. | Klugman et al. 2011 | |
| Best Intentions Questionnaire (BIQ) | A 24-item questionnaire test that assesses how physician biases may affect patient care. | Gowda et al. 2018 | |
| The Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI) | A 22-item questionnaire that measures three components of burnout in health professional populations: emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and low sense of personal accomplishment. | Orr et al. 2019 | |
| Communication Skills Attitudes Scale (CSAS) | A 26-item questionnaire that assesses student perceptions towards learning communication skills. | Klugman et al. 2011 | |
| The Compassion Scale | A 24-item questionnaire that measures compassionate responses through three conflicting domains: kindness-versus-indifferences, common humanity-versus-separation, and mindfulness-versus-disengagement. | Zazulak et al. 2015 – IRI scale | |
| Short Grit Scale (GRIT-S) | An 8-item questionnaire that measures two components of grit: perseverance of effort and consistency of interest. | Strohbehn et al. 2020 | |
| The Five-Facet Mindfulness Scale | A 39-tem questionnaire that assesses five domains of mindfulness: description, self-expression, acts of self-awareness, non-judgment of inner experience, and non-reactivity to inner experience. | Zazulak et al. 2017 – Five Facet Mindfulness Scale |