Abstract

The Comprehensive Osteopathic Medical Licensing Examination of the United States of America (COMLEX-USA) is a three level examination used as a pathway to licensure for students in osteopathic medical education programs. COMLEX-USA Level 2 includes a written assessment of Fundamental Clinical Sciences for Osteopathic Medical Practice (Level 2-Cognitive Evaluation [L2-CE]) delivered in a computer based format and separate performance evaluation (Level 2-Performance Evaluation [L2-PE]) administered through live encounters with standardized patients. L2-PE was designed to augment L2-CE. It is expected that the two examinations measure related yet distinct constructs. To explore the concurrent validity of L2-CE with L2-PE. First attempt test scores were obtained from the National Board of Osteopathic Medical Examiners database for 6,639 candidates who took L2-CE between June 2019 and May 2020 and matched to the students' L2-PE scores. The sample represented all colleges of osteopathic medicine and 97.5% of candidates who took L2-CE during the complete 2019-2020 test cycle. We calculated disattenuated correlations between the total score for L2-CE, the L2-CE scores for the seven competency domains (CD1 through CD7), and the L2-PE scores for the Humanistic Domain (HM) and Biomedical/Biomechanical Domain (BM). All scores were on continuous scales. Pearson correlations ranged from 0.10 to 0.88 and were all statically significant (p<0.01). L2-CE total score was most strongly correlated with CD2 (0.88) and CD3 (0.85). Pearson correlations between the L2-CE competency domain subscores ranged from 0.17 to 0.70, and correlations which included either HM or BM ranged from 0.10 to 0.34 with the strongest of those correlations being between BM and L2-CE total score (0.34) as well as between HM and BM (0.28).The largest increase between corresponding Pearson and disattenuated correlations was for pairs of scores with lower reliabilities such as CD5 and CD6, which had a Pearson correlation of 0.17 and a disattenuated correlation of 0.68. The smallest increase in correlations was observed in pairs of scores with larger reliabilities such as L2-CE total score and HM, which had a Pearson correlation of 0.23 and a disattenuated correlation of 0.28. The reliability of L2-CE was 0.87, 0.81 for HM, and 0.73 for BM. The reliabilities for the L2-CE competency domain scores ranged from 0.22 to 0.74. The small to moderate correlations between the L2-CE total score and the two L2-PE support the expectation that these examinations measure related but distinct constructs. The correlations between L2-PE and L2-CE competency domain subscores reflect the distribution of items defined by the L2-PE blueprint, providing evidence that the examinations are performing as designed. This study provides evidence supporting the validity of the blueprints for constructing COMLEX-USA Levels 2-CE and 2-PE examinations in concert with the purpose and nature of the examinations.

Highlights

  • The Comprehensive Osteopathic Medical Licensing Examination of the United States of America (COMLEX-USA) is a series of standardized assessments used in part to fulfill licensure requirements for the practice of osteopathic

  • L2-CE total score was most strongly correlated with CD2 (0.88) and CD3 (0.85)

  • Pearson correlations between the L2-CE competency domain subscores ranged from 0.17 to 0.70, and correlations which included either Humanistic Domain (HM) or Biomechanical Domain (BM) ranged from 0.10 to 0.34 with the strongest of those correlations being between BM and L2-CE total score (0.34) as well as between HM and BM (0.28).The largest increase between corresponding Pearson and disattenuated correlations was for pairs of scores with lower reliabilities such as CD5 and CD6, which had a Pearson correlation of 0.17 and a disattenuated correlation of 0.68

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Summary

Introduction

The Comprehensive Osteopathic Medical Licensing Examination of the United States of America (COMLEX-USA) is a series of standardized assessments used in part to fulfill licensure requirements for the practice of osteopathic. The L2-PE was designed to measure these clinical skills [5] and help fulfill the mission of the National Board of Osteopathic Medical Examiners (NBOME) “to protect the public by providing the means to assess competencies of osteopathic medicine and related health care professions” [1]. Given the similarities between these examinations in terms of the time at which they are taken by medical students and commonalities in the master blueprint along with expected differences due to the types of examinations, a study exploring the relationship between L2-PE and L2-CE is essential to provide evidence of validity supporting the requirement that osteopathic medical school students demonstrate their knowledge and application of fundamental clinical skills for osteopathic medical practice on both assessments. All examinations in the COMLEX-USA series share the master blueprint based on the same two dimensions, labeled as competency domains and clinical presentations. The goal of this study was to examine the relationships between L2-PE and L2-CE by correlating the scores on HM and BM domains with the L2-CE total score and the L2-CE subscores for CD1 through CD7

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