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Formative assessment of classroom competencies (FACCs) for postgraduate medical trainees. Professor Chris Gray on behalf of Department of Medical Education, City Hospitals Sunderland . Competence: ability of a professional to
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Formative assessment of classroom competencies (FACCs) for postgraduate medical trainees Professor Chris Gray on behalf of Department of Medical Education, City Hospitals Sunderland
Competence: ability of a professional to combine knowledge, skills and behaviour to perform a specific role Definition McClelland, D. C. (1973). American Psychologist, 28, 1-14.
The legal standard • ‘The ordinary reasonable professional exercising skills appropriate to the role and profession’ (Bolam test) • No concessions for inexperience • Competence assumed • But…competence acquired Bolam v Friern Hospital Management Cttee 1957. 1. WLR 583
Problem • Assumption of competence in core clinical skills • Core skills defined by GMC • Variation between graduates within and between institutions • Trust request to provide evidence for all trainees
Aims • To determine the feasibility of undertaking a routine assessment of core competencies as part of the routine induction process for postgraduate medical trainees. • To provide an overview of GMC defined core competencies in medical trainees. • To develop a classroom based assessment of core clinical competencies as a tool for assessing and developing clinical skills.
MethodsUndergraduate experience in core skills Questionnaire to all FY1 doctors (June/July 07) N=18 • Self reported frequency core skills undertaken prior to graduation (patients/mannequins). • Self reported confidence in skills prior to FY1 and end FY1. 0 no confidence - 10 no concerns.
Self reported frequencies (median IQR) of undergraduate experience in the core clinical skills (18 FY1 doctors)
FY1 doctors’ self confidence ratings for core competencies prior to (retrospective) and final 4 weeks (current) of F1 training. Likert scale 1= no confidence and 10 = confident, no concerns. N=18.
Development of FACCs • Consensus panel , 22 GMC core skills • Tasks undertaken as routine or emergency, unsupervised, generic not speciality • 8 station OSCE (7 observed, 1 written) • 7mins stations, max for circuit 1 hour • Venesection, nasogastric tube insertion, male catheterisation, cannula insertion, prescribing, intermediate life support (including defibrillation), ECG recording, arterial blood gas sampling
Assessment of performance Within each station: • Pre defined performance domains: infection control techniques, ability to adequately select, prepare and safely dispose of equipment, and the ability to sequence and complete the procedure • For each domain, candidates were scored as having completed the tasks correctly or not. • Pre-specified ‘critical’ domains those tasks which if not completed correctly or omitted would expose the patient, staff or the host organisation to clinical risk
Statistics • For each station a percentage score was derived for each candidate’s performance. (overview: all candidates, medians and distributions) • Within each station: Frequency of critical errors/omissions achieved by all candidates recorded
Feasibility • 106 doctors (87.6% of 121 overall) completed assessment (compulsory!) • 91 [85.5%] doctors completed in first three days as part of routine induction process. • 14 circuits during the first 14 days of employment in the trust.
Distribution of FACCs scores (%) for each station (Median and IQR 1st and 3rd quartiles (all candidates N=106)
% Number of candidates failing criticals at each station (N=106)
Arterial blood gas 57% Failed to check syringe expiry 17% failed express air/heparin pre 21% failed express air post Male catheterisation 7.5% failed reposition foreskin Resuscitation 72% one or more errors/omissions 33% Failed opening airway 21% failed remove oxygen 7% omitted stand clear warning IV cannulation 38.7% failed to confirm content of flush Criticals
Performance scores (%) for each clinical station (median, IQR) by training grade. *p=0.012 **p<0.001 (KW Anova)
Interpretation • Pre FY confidence in practical skills low (exc. venesection, ECG) • Pre FY experience in practical skills limited • Post FY1 confidence high (exc resuscitation) • FACCs feasible, majority (88%) assessed during induction (feasibility) • Overall median station scores >90% suggest competency (overview) • Critical errors analysis highlight problem areas (development)
Take away message! Get FY1 to do…. your ABGs and NG tubes!!
Limitations • Appropriateness of classroom based assessment of clinical skills • Circuit construct – relevance across all specialities • OSCE familiarity (training grade effect, variation) • Definition of competence, hierarchy of criticals • Integration of assessment performance into trainee’s personal development plan • Managing the criticals / poor performer
Acknowledgements • Undergraduate and postgraduate teams • Examiners • Participants (not voluntary but in spirit of collaboration)
Assessment • What is competence ? • Assessment against ‘standard’ not definable • Diversity of grades and specialities • Formative (strengths/weaknesses) • No pass fail threshold • Identify critical errors omissions • Direct remedial learning and development
‘Do you feel your undergraduate training adequately prepared you for undertaking the GMC core practical procedures as listed?’ N=18 FY1 doctors 0= totally unprepared, 10 = totally prepared.