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ABSTRACT: Background
It is not known if construct-related validity (progression of scores with different levels of training) and generalizability of Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) scenarios previously used with non-US graduating anesthesiology residents translate to a US training program.Objective
We assessed for progression of scores with training for a validated high-stakes simulation-based anesthesiology examination.Methods
Fifty US anesthesiology residents in postgraduate years (PGYs) 2 to 4 were evaluated in operating room, trauma, and resuscitation scenarios developed for and used in a high-stakes Israeli Anesthesiology Board examination, requiring a score of 70% on the checklist for passing (including all critical items).Results
The OSCE error rate was lower for PGY-4 than PGY-2 residents in each field, and for most scenarios within each field. The critical item error rate was significantly lower for PGY-4 than PGY-3 residents in operating room scenarios, and for PGY-4 than PGY-2 residents in resuscitation scenarios. The final pass rate was significantly higher for PGY-3 and PGY-4 than PGY-2 residents in operating room scenarios, and also was significantly higher for PGY-4 than PGY-2 residents overall. PGY-4 residents had a better error rate, total scenarios score, general evaluation score, critical items error rate, and final pass rate than PGY-2 residents.Conclusions
The comparable error rates, performance grades, and pass rates for US PGY-4 and non-US (Israeli) graduating (PGY-4 equivalent) residents, and the progression of scores among US residents with training level, demonstrate the construct-related validity and generalizability of these high-stakes OSCE scenarios.
SUBMITTER: Sidi A
PROVIDER: S-EPMC4535213 | biostudies-literature | 2014 Sep
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Sidi Avner A Gravenstein Nikolaus N Lampotang Samsun S
Journal of graduate medical education 20140901 3
<h4>Background</h4>It is not known if construct-related validity (progression of scores with different levels of training) and generalizability of Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) scenarios previously used with non-US graduating anesthesiology residents translate to a US training program.<h4>Objective</h4>We assessed for progression of scores with training for a validated high-stakes simulation-based anesthesiology examination.<h4>Methods</h4>Fifty US anesthesiology residents in ...[more]