Reconceptualizing variable rater assessments as both an educational and clinical care problem.
Publication/Presentation Date
5-1-2014
Abstract
The public is calling for the U.S. health care and medical education system to be accountable for ensuring high-quality, safe, effective, patient-centered care. As medical education shifts to a competency-based training paradigm, clinician educators' assessment of and feedback to trainees about their developing clinical skills becomes paramount. However, there is substantial variability in the accuracy, reliability, and validity of the assessments faculty make when they directly observe trainees with patients. These difficulties have been treated primarily as a rater cognition problem focusing on the inability of the assessor to make reliable and valid assessments of the trainee.The authors' purpose is to reconceptualize the rater cognition problem as both an educational and clinical care problem. The variable quality of faculty assessments is not just a psychometric predicament but also an issue that has implications for decisions regarding trainee supervision and the delivery of quality patient care. The authors suggest that the frame of reference for rating performance during workplace-based assessments be the ability to provide safe, effective, patient-centered care. The authors developed the Accountable Assessment for Quality Care and Supervision equation to remind faculty that supervision is a dynamic, complex process essential for patients to receive high-quality care. This fundamental shift in how assessment is conceptualized requires new models of faculty development and emphasizes the essential and irreplaceable importance of the clinician educator in trainee assessment.
Volume
89
Issue
5
First Page
721
Last Page
727
ISSN
1938-808X
Published In/Presented At
Kogan, J. R., Conforti, L. N., Iobst, W. F., & Holmboe, E. S. (2014). Reconceptualizing variable rater assessments as both an educational and clinical care problem. Academic medicine : journal of the Association of American Medical Colleges, 89(5), 721–727. https://doi.org/10.1097/ACM.0000000000000221
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
24667513
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article