Construct Validity of the Reporter-Interpreter-Manager-Educator Structure for Assessing Students' Patient Encounter Skills

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Standard

Construct Validity of the Reporter-Interpreter-Manager-Educator Structure for Assessing Students' Patient Encounter Skills. / Tolsgaard, Martin G; Arendrup, Henrik; Lindhardt, Bjarne O; Hillingsø, Jens Georg; Stoltenberg, Michael Bo; Ringsted, Charlotte.

I: Academic Medicine, Bind 87, Nr. 6, 2012, s. 799-806.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Tolsgaard, MG, Arendrup, H, Lindhardt, BO, Hillingsø, JG, Stoltenberg, MB & Ringsted, C 2012, 'Construct Validity of the Reporter-Interpreter-Manager-Educator Structure for Assessing Students' Patient Encounter Skills', Academic Medicine, bind 87, nr. 6, s. 799-806. https://doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0b013e318253c8be

APA

Tolsgaard, M. G., Arendrup, H., Lindhardt, B. O., Hillingsø, J. G., Stoltenberg, M. B., & Ringsted, C. (2012). Construct Validity of the Reporter-Interpreter-Manager-Educator Structure for Assessing Students' Patient Encounter Skills. Academic Medicine, 87(6), 799-806. https://doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0b013e318253c8be

Vancouver

Tolsgaard MG, Arendrup H, Lindhardt BO, Hillingsø JG, Stoltenberg MB, Ringsted C. Construct Validity of the Reporter-Interpreter-Manager-Educator Structure for Assessing Students' Patient Encounter Skills. Academic Medicine. 2012;87(6):799-806. https://doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0b013e318253c8be

Author

Tolsgaard, Martin G ; Arendrup, Henrik ; Lindhardt, Bjarne O ; Hillingsø, Jens Georg ; Stoltenberg, Michael Bo ; Ringsted, Charlotte. / Construct Validity of the Reporter-Interpreter-Manager-Educator Structure for Assessing Students' Patient Encounter Skills. I: Academic Medicine. 2012 ; Bind 87, Nr. 6. s. 799-806.

Bibtex

@article{6cd316ee28294c50a27f6e04fe0921d3,
title = "Construct Validity of the Reporter-Interpreter-Manager-Educator Structure for Assessing Students' Patient Encounter Skills",
abstract = "PURPOSE: The aim of this study, done in Denmark, was to explore the construct validity of a Reporter-Interpreter-Manager-Educator (RIME)-structured scoring format for assessing patient encounter skills. METHOD: The authors developed a RIME-structured scoring form and explored its construct validity in a two-step procedure. The first step (implemented in 2009) was a randomized, controlled, experimental study in which the performance of three groups (16 fourth-year medical students, 16 sixth-year medical students, and 16 interns) was assessed in two simulated patient encounters. The second step (carried out during 2009-2010) was an observational study of patient encounter skills where clinician examiners used the scoring form in end-of-clerkship oral examinations of three consecutive cohorts of a total of 547 fourth-year medical students. RESULTS: In the experimental study, RIME scores showed significant difference between the three groups-fourth-year students, mean 41.7 (standard deviation [SD] 11.0); sixth-year students, mean 48.2 (SD 10.9); and interns, mean 61.9 (SD 8.5), one-way ANOVA, P <.0001-and showed a progression over the four RIME elements with participants' increasing competence.In the observational study, the mean RIME score was higher (83.8 [SD 15.5]), and advanced RIME levels were frequently missing or scored {"}not relevant{"} by the clinician examiners. CONCLUSION: In an experimental setup, the RIME structure demonstrated construct validity in terms of reflecting progress in competence in managing patient encounters when assessed according to an advanced criterion. However, clinician examiners may tacitly score the elements according to what can be expected at a certain level of student experience.",
author = "Tolsgaard, {Martin G} and Henrik Arendrup and Lindhardt, {Bjarne O} and Hillings{\o}, {Jens Georg} and Stoltenberg, {Michael Bo} and Charlotte Ringsted",
year = "2012",
doi = "10.1097/ACM.0b013e318253c8be",
language = "English",
volume = "87",
pages = "799--806",
journal = "Academic Medicine",
issn = "1040-2446",
publisher = "Lippincott Williams & Wilkins",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Construct Validity of the Reporter-Interpreter-Manager-Educator Structure for Assessing Students' Patient Encounter Skills

AU - Tolsgaard, Martin G

AU - Arendrup, Henrik

AU - Lindhardt, Bjarne O

AU - Hillingsø, Jens Georg

AU - Stoltenberg, Michael Bo

AU - Ringsted, Charlotte

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - PURPOSE: The aim of this study, done in Denmark, was to explore the construct validity of a Reporter-Interpreter-Manager-Educator (RIME)-structured scoring format for assessing patient encounter skills. METHOD: The authors developed a RIME-structured scoring form and explored its construct validity in a two-step procedure. The first step (implemented in 2009) was a randomized, controlled, experimental study in which the performance of three groups (16 fourth-year medical students, 16 sixth-year medical students, and 16 interns) was assessed in two simulated patient encounters. The second step (carried out during 2009-2010) was an observational study of patient encounter skills where clinician examiners used the scoring form in end-of-clerkship oral examinations of three consecutive cohorts of a total of 547 fourth-year medical students. RESULTS: In the experimental study, RIME scores showed significant difference between the three groups-fourth-year students, mean 41.7 (standard deviation [SD] 11.0); sixth-year students, mean 48.2 (SD 10.9); and interns, mean 61.9 (SD 8.5), one-way ANOVA, P <.0001-and showed a progression over the four RIME elements with participants' increasing competence.In the observational study, the mean RIME score was higher (83.8 [SD 15.5]), and advanced RIME levels were frequently missing or scored "not relevant" by the clinician examiners. CONCLUSION: In an experimental setup, the RIME structure demonstrated construct validity in terms of reflecting progress in competence in managing patient encounters when assessed according to an advanced criterion. However, clinician examiners may tacitly score the elements according to what can be expected at a certain level of student experience.

AB - PURPOSE: The aim of this study, done in Denmark, was to explore the construct validity of a Reporter-Interpreter-Manager-Educator (RIME)-structured scoring format for assessing patient encounter skills. METHOD: The authors developed a RIME-structured scoring form and explored its construct validity in a two-step procedure. The first step (implemented in 2009) was a randomized, controlled, experimental study in which the performance of three groups (16 fourth-year medical students, 16 sixth-year medical students, and 16 interns) was assessed in two simulated patient encounters. The second step (carried out during 2009-2010) was an observational study of patient encounter skills where clinician examiners used the scoring form in end-of-clerkship oral examinations of three consecutive cohorts of a total of 547 fourth-year medical students. RESULTS: In the experimental study, RIME scores showed significant difference between the three groups-fourth-year students, mean 41.7 (standard deviation [SD] 11.0); sixth-year students, mean 48.2 (SD 10.9); and interns, mean 61.9 (SD 8.5), one-way ANOVA, P <.0001-and showed a progression over the four RIME elements with participants' increasing competence.In the observational study, the mean RIME score was higher (83.8 [SD 15.5]), and advanced RIME levels were frequently missing or scored "not relevant" by the clinician examiners. CONCLUSION: In an experimental setup, the RIME structure demonstrated construct validity in terms of reflecting progress in competence in managing patient encounters when assessed according to an advanced criterion. However, clinician examiners may tacitly score the elements according to what can be expected at a certain level of student experience.

U2 - 10.1097/ACM.0b013e318253c8be

DO - 10.1097/ACM.0b013e318253c8be

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 22534594

VL - 87

SP - 799

EP - 806

JO - Academic Medicine

JF - Academic Medicine

SN - 1040-2446

IS - 6

ER -

ID: 40140545