When less is more: validating a brief scale to rate interprofessional team competencies

Background: There is a need for validated and easy-to-apply behavior-based tools for assessing interprofessional team competencies in clinical settings. The seven-item observer-based Modified McMaster-Ottawa scale was developed for the Team Objective Structured Clinical Encounter (TOSCE) to assess i...

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Main Authors: Désirée A. Lie, Regina Richter-Lagha, Christopher P. Forest, Anne Walsh, Kevin Lohenry
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2017-01-01
Series:Medical Education Online
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10872981.2017.1314751
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spelling doaj-70f284fd60d340e59ac7bb5e2ba72d702020-11-25T02:17:58ZengTaylor & Francis GroupMedical Education Online1087-29812017-01-0122110.1080/10872981.2017.13147511314751When less is more: validating a brief scale to rate interprofessional team competenciesDésirée A. Lie0Regina Richter-Lagha1Christopher P. Forest2Anne Walsh3Kevin Lohenry4Keck School of Medicine of the University of Southern CaliforniaKeck School of Medicine of the University of Southern CaliforniaKeck School of Medicine of the University of Southern CaliforniaKeck School of Medicine of the University of Southern CaliforniaKeck School of Medicine of the University of Southern CaliforniaBackground: There is a need for validated and easy-to-apply behavior-based tools for assessing interprofessional team competencies in clinical settings. The seven-item observer-based Modified McMaster-Ottawa scale was developed for the Team Objective Structured Clinical Encounter (TOSCE) to assess individual and team performance in interprofessional patient encounters. Objective: We aimed to improve scale usability for clinical settings by reducing item numbers while maintaining generalizability; and to explore the minimum number of observed cases required to achieve modest generalizability for giving feedback. Design: We administered a two-station TOSCE in April 2016 to 63 students split into 16 newly-formed teams, each consisting of four professions. The stations were of similar difficulty. We trained sixteen faculty to rate two teams each. We examined individual and team performance scores using generalizability (G) theory and principal component analysis (PCA). Results: The seven-item scale shows modest generalizability (.75) with individual scores. PCA revealed multicollinearity and singularity among scale items and we identified three potential items for removal. Reducing items for individual scores from seven to four (measuring Collaboration, Roles, Patient/Family-centeredness, and Conflict Management) changed scale generalizability from .75 to .73. Performance assessment with two cases is associated with reasonable generalizability (.73). Students in newly-formed interprofessional teams show a learning curve after one patient encounter. Team scores from a two-station TOSCE demonstrate low generalizability whether the scale consisted of four (.53) or seven items (.55). Conclusion: The four-item Modified McMaster-Ottawa scale for assessing individual performance in interprofessional teams retains the generalizability and validity of the seven-item scale. Observation of students in teams interacting with two different patients provides reasonably reliable ratings for giving feedback. The four-item scale has potential for assessing individual student skills and the impact of IPE curricula in clinical practice settings. Abbreviations: IPE: Interprofessional education; SP: Standardized patient; TOSCE: Team objective structured clinical encounterhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10872981.2017.1314751Interprofessional educationteam behaviorsassessmentteam objective structured clinical encountervalidationrating scale
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Désirée A. Lie
Regina Richter-Lagha
Christopher P. Forest
Anne Walsh
Kevin Lohenry
spellingShingle Désirée A. Lie
Regina Richter-Lagha
Christopher P. Forest
Anne Walsh
Kevin Lohenry
When less is more: validating a brief scale to rate interprofessional team competencies
Medical Education Online
Interprofessional education
team behaviors
assessment
team objective structured clinical encounter
validation
rating scale
author_facet Désirée A. Lie
Regina Richter-Lagha
Christopher P. Forest
Anne Walsh
Kevin Lohenry
author_sort Désirée A. Lie
title When less is more: validating a brief scale to rate interprofessional team competencies
title_short When less is more: validating a brief scale to rate interprofessional team competencies
title_full When less is more: validating a brief scale to rate interprofessional team competencies
title_fullStr When less is more: validating a brief scale to rate interprofessional team competencies
title_full_unstemmed When less is more: validating a brief scale to rate interprofessional team competencies
title_sort when less is more: validating a brief scale to rate interprofessional team competencies
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Medical Education Online
issn 1087-2981
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Background: There is a need for validated and easy-to-apply behavior-based tools for assessing interprofessional team competencies in clinical settings. The seven-item observer-based Modified McMaster-Ottawa scale was developed for the Team Objective Structured Clinical Encounter (TOSCE) to assess individual and team performance in interprofessional patient encounters. Objective: We aimed to improve scale usability for clinical settings by reducing item numbers while maintaining generalizability; and to explore the minimum number of observed cases required to achieve modest generalizability for giving feedback. Design: We administered a two-station TOSCE in April 2016 to 63 students split into 16 newly-formed teams, each consisting of four professions. The stations were of similar difficulty. We trained sixteen faculty to rate two teams each. We examined individual and team performance scores using generalizability (G) theory and principal component analysis (PCA). Results: The seven-item scale shows modest generalizability (.75) with individual scores. PCA revealed multicollinearity and singularity among scale items and we identified three potential items for removal. Reducing items for individual scores from seven to four (measuring Collaboration, Roles, Patient/Family-centeredness, and Conflict Management) changed scale generalizability from .75 to .73. Performance assessment with two cases is associated with reasonable generalizability (.73). Students in newly-formed interprofessional teams show a learning curve after one patient encounter. Team scores from a two-station TOSCE demonstrate low generalizability whether the scale consisted of four (.53) or seven items (.55). Conclusion: The four-item Modified McMaster-Ottawa scale for assessing individual performance in interprofessional teams retains the generalizability and validity of the seven-item scale. Observation of students in teams interacting with two different patients provides reasonably reliable ratings for giving feedback. The four-item scale has potential for assessing individual student skills and the impact of IPE curricula in clinical practice settings. Abbreviations: IPE: Interprofessional education; SP: Standardized patient; TOSCE: Team objective structured clinical encounter
topic Interprofessional education
team behaviors
assessment
team objective structured clinical encounter
validation
rating scale
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10872981.2017.1314751
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