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An Investigation of the Sources of Measurement Error in the Post-Encounter Written Scores from Standardized Patient Examinations
Authors:Boulet Jack R.  Ben-David Miriam Friedman  Burdick William  Ziv Amitai  Gary Nancy  Hambleton Ronald K.
Affiliation:(1) Educational Commission for Foreign Medical Graduates, 3624 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104-2685, USA;(2) University of Massachusetts, Amherst, MA, USA
Abstract:Purpose. Post-encounter written exercises (e.g., patient notes) have been included in clinical skills assessments that use standardized patients. The purpose of this study was to estimate the generalizability of the scores from these written exercises when they are rated by various trained health professionals, including physicians. Method. The patient notes from a 10 station clinical skills examination involving 10 first year emergency medicine residents were analytically scored by four rater groups: three physicians, three nurses, three fourth year medical students, three billing clerks. Generalizability analyses were used to partition the various sources of error variance and derive reliability-like coefficients for each group of raters. Results. The generalizability analyses indicated that case-to-case variability was a major source of error variance in the patient note scores. The variance attributable to the rater or to the rater by examinee interaction was negligible. This finding was consistent across the four rater groups. Generalizability coefficients in excess of 0.80 were achieved for each of the four sets of raters. Physicians did, however, produce the most dependable scores. Conclusion. There is little advantage, from a reliability perspective, in using more than one trained physician, or other health professional who is adequately trained to score the patient note. Measurement error is introduced primarily by case sampling variability. This suggests that, if required, increases in the generalizability of the patient note scores can be made through the addition of cases, and not the addition of raters. This revised version was published online in July 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.
Keywords:clinical skills assessment  generalizability  reliability  scoring
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