Abstract

IntroductionThe Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) specifically notes multisource feedback (MSF) as a recommended means of resident assessment in the emergency medicine (EM) Milestones. High-fidelity simulation is an environment wherein residents can receive MSF from various types of healthcare professionals. Previously, the Queen’s Simulation Assessment Tool (QSAT) has been validated for faculty to assess residents in five categories: assessment; diagnostic actions; therapeutic actions; interpersonal communication, and overall assessment. We sought to determine whether the QSAT could be used to provide MSF using a standardized simulation case.MethodsProspectively after institutional review board approval, residents from a dual ACGME/osteopathic-approved postgraduate years (PGY) 1–4 EM residency were consented for participation. We developed a standardized resuscitation after overdose case with specific 1–5 Likert anchors used by the QSAT. A PGY 2–4 resident participated in the role of team leader, who completed a QSAT as self-assessment. The team consisted of a PGY-1 peer, an emergency medical services (EMS) provider, and a nurse. Two core faculty were present to administer the simulation case and assess. Demographics were gathered from all participants completing QSATs. We analyzed QSATs by each category and on cumulative score. Hypothesis testing was performed using intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC), with 95% confidence intervals. Interpretation of ICC results was based on previously published definitions.ResultsWe enrolled 34 team leader residents along with 34 nurses. A single PGY-1, a single EMS provider and two faculty were also enrolled. Faculty provided higher cumulative QSAT scores than the other sources of MSF. QSAT scores did not increase with team leader PGY level. ICC for inter-rater reliability for all sources of MSF was 0.754 (0.572–0.867). Removing the self-evaluation scores increased inter-rater reliability to 0.838 (0.733–0.910). There was lesser agreement between faculty and nurse evaluations than from the EMS or peer evaluation.ConclusionIn this single-site cohort using an internally developed simulation case, the QSAT provided MSF with excellent reliability. Self-assessment decreases the reliability of the MSF, and our data suggest self-assessment should not be a component of MSF. Use of the QSAT for MSF may be considered as a source of data for clinical competency committees.

Highlights

  • The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) notes multisource feedback (MSF) as a recommended means of resident assessment in the emergency medicine (EM) Milestones

  • Use of the Queen’s Simulation Assessment Tool (QSAT) for MSF may be considered as a source of data for clinical competency committees. [West J Emerg Med 2019;20(1)64–70.]

  • Assessment of residents in Emergency Medicine (EM) is required by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), and this has been codified with the release of the ACGME Milestones.[3]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) notes multisource feedback (MSF) as a recommended means of resident assessment in the emergency medicine (EM) Milestones. An advantage of high-fidelity simulation is the provision of a variety of case presentations ranging from commonly-seen presentations to rare but critical pathologies while maintaining a clinical sense of urgency in a low-stakes environment.[1] Simulation has evolved for formative and summative assessment.[2] Assessment of residents in Emergency Medicine (EM) is required by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME), and this has been codified with the release of the ACGME Milestones.[3] Milestone guidelines recommend simulation as a means of assessment of EM residents for milestones 1-11 and 16-23.3. The authors studied the use of the QSAT tool in a formalized Objective Structural Clinical Examination to be used for assessment within their residency program.[6]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call