Development, Validation, and Implementation of a Medical Judgment Metric
Background: Medical decision making is a critical, yet understudied, aspect of medical education. Aims: To develop the Medical Judgment Metric (MJM), a numerical rubric to quantify good decisions in practice in simulated environments; and to obtain initial preliminary evidence of reliability and val...
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2017-06-01
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Series: | MDM Policy & Practice |
Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1177/2381468317715262 |
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doaj-3ff2eb2397ed40c881c81170a6869d4c2020-11-25T03:11:21ZengSAGE PublishingMDM Policy & Practice2381-46832017-06-01210.1177/2381468317715262Development, Validation, and Implementation of a Medical Judgment MetricRami A. Ahmed DO, MHPEMichele L. McCarroll PhDAlan Schwartz PhDM. David Gothard MSS. Scott AtkinsonPatrick G. Hughes DOJose Ramon Cepeda Brito MDLori Assad MPHJerry G. Myers PhDRichard L. George MD, MSPH, FACSBackground: Medical decision making is a critical, yet understudied, aspect of medical education. Aims: To develop the Medical Judgment Metric (MJM), a numerical rubric to quantify good decisions in practice in simulated environments; and to obtain initial preliminary evidence of reliability and validity of the tool. Methods: The individual MJM items, domains, and sections of the MJM were built based on existing standardized frameworks. Content validity was determined by a convenient sample of eight experts. The MJM instrument was pilot tested in four medical simulations with a team of three medical raters assessing 40 participants with four levels of medical experience and skill. Results: Raters were highly consistent in their MJM scores in each scenario (intraclass correlation coefficient 0.965 to 0.987) as well as their evaluation of the expected patient outcome (Fleiss’s Kappa 0.791 to 0.906). For each simulation scenario, average rater cut-scores significantly predicted expected loss of life or stabilization (Cohen’s Kappa 0.851 to 0.880). Discussion : The MJM demonstrated preliminary evidence of reliability and validity.https://doi.org/10.1177/2381468317715262 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Rami A. Ahmed DO, MHPE Michele L. McCarroll PhD Alan Schwartz PhD M. David Gothard MS S. Scott Atkinson Patrick G. Hughes DO Jose Ramon Cepeda Brito MD Lori Assad MPH Jerry G. Myers PhD Richard L. George MD, MSPH, FACS |
spellingShingle |
Rami A. Ahmed DO, MHPE Michele L. McCarroll PhD Alan Schwartz PhD M. David Gothard MS S. Scott Atkinson Patrick G. Hughes DO Jose Ramon Cepeda Brito MD Lori Assad MPH Jerry G. Myers PhD Richard L. George MD, MSPH, FACS Development, Validation, and Implementation of a Medical Judgment Metric MDM Policy & Practice |
author_facet |
Rami A. Ahmed DO, MHPE Michele L. McCarroll PhD Alan Schwartz PhD M. David Gothard MS S. Scott Atkinson Patrick G. Hughes DO Jose Ramon Cepeda Brito MD Lori Assad MPH Jerry G. Myers PhD Richard L. George MD, MSPH, FACS |
author_sort |
Rami A. Ahmed DO, MHPE |
title |
Development, Validation, and Implementation of a Medical Judgment Metric |
title_short |
Development, Validation, and Implementation of a Medical Judgment Metric |
title_full |
Development, Validation, and Implementation of a Medical Judgment Metric |
title_fullStr |
Development, Validation, and Implementation of a Medical Judgment Metric |
title_full_unstemmed |
Development, Validation, and Implementation of a Medical Judgment Metric |
title_sort |
development, validation, and implementation of a medical judgment metric |
publisher |
SAGE Publishing |
series |
MDM Policy & Practice |
issn |
2381-4683 |
publishDate |
2017-06-01 |
description |
Background: Medical decision making is a critical, yet understudied, aspect of medical education. Aims: To develop the Medical Judgment Metric (MJM), a numerical rubric to quantify good decisions in practice in simulated environments; and to obtain initial preliminary evidence of reliability and validity of the tool. Methods: The individual MJM items, domains, and sections of the MJM were built based on existing standardized frameworks. Content validity was determined by a convenient sample of eight experts. The MJM instrument was pilot tested in four medical simulations with a team of three medical raters assessing 40 participants with four levels of medical experience and skill. Results: Raters were highly consistent in their MJM scores in each scenario (intraclass correlation coefficient 0.965 to 0.987) as well as their evaluation of the expected patient outcome (Fleiss’s Kappa 0.791 to 0.906). For each simulation scenario, average rater cut-scores significantly predicted expected loss of life or stabilization (Cohen’s Kappa 0.851 to 0.880). Discussion : The MJM demonstrated preliminary evidence of reliability and validity. |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1177/2381468317715262 |
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