Variability in the clinical skills of residents entering training programs in surgery

Background. Residents may have significant differences in clinical skills at the start of their surgical training. The purpose of this study was to investigate the variability in these skills by using an objective structured clinical examination. Methods. A needs assessment was performed, and an obj...

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Published inSurgery Vol. 118; no. 2; pp. 300 - 309
Main Authors Sachdeva, Ajit K., Loiacono, Laurie A., Amiel, Gilad E., Blair, Patrice G., Friedman, Miriam, Roslyn, Joel J.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Mosby, Inc 01.08.1995
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Summary:Background. Residents may have significant differences in clinical skills at the start of their surgical training. The purpose of this study was to investigate the variability in these skills by using an objective structured clinical examination. Methods. A needs assessment was performed, and an objective structured clinical examination composed of 10, two-part stations was developed. Standardized patients (SPs) were trained, validated, and used as both simulated patients and evaluators to assess history taking, physical examination, and interpersonal skills of 10 first-year surgical residents. Structured patient notes (PNs) written by residents after the SP encounters were used to assess history and physical examination documentation skills. Data from one station were not used because more than 25% of the SP ratings were missing. Results. The α-retiability was 0.78 for SP ratings, 0.91 for PN scores, and 0.91 for the combined scores. ANOVA revealed significant variation in individual residents' clinical skills as assessed by SPs (F=4.56, p<0.01), PNs (F=11.09, p<0.001), or both (F=10.9, p<0.001). Paired t tests showed that residents scored significantly higher on history taking than on physical examination and attained significantly lower scores on documentation as compared with performance of both history and physical examination (p<0.001 for each comparison). Conclusions. The results showed significant variability in clinical skills of the group of residents and yielded detailed information on the performance of each resident. The data were shared with individual residents and are being used to make changes in the educational activities of the program.
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ISSN:0039-6060
1532-7361
DOI:10.1016/S0039-6060(05)80338-1