4.6 Article

Validity evidence for the Anesthesia Clinical Encounter Assessment (ACEA) tool to support competency-based medical education

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF ANAESTHESIA
Volume 128, Issue 4, Pages 691-699

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bja.2021.12.012

Keywords

anaesthesia postgraduate training; competency-based medical education; entrustment scale; Messick's validity framework; workplace-based assessment

Categories

Funding

  1. Education Research & Scholarship Grant, Sunnybrook Education Advisory Council (SEAC) Education Research Unit (ERU), ON, Canada
  2. Education Development Fund, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, ON, Canada
  3. Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation, ON Canada

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This study provides evidence supporting the validity of ACEA as an assessment tool for evaluating the competence of residents in perioperative care, and supports its use in competency-based anaesthesiology training.
Background: Workplace-based assessment (WBA) is key to a competency-based assessment strategy. Concomitantly with our programme's launch of competency-based medical education, we developed an entrustment-based WBA, the Anesthesia Clinical Encounter Assessment (ACEA), to assess readiness for independent practice of competencies essential to perioperative patient care. This study aimed to examine validity evidence of the ACEA during postgraduate anaesthesiology training. Methods: The ACEA comprises an eight-item global rating scale (GRS), an overall independence rating, an eight-item checklist, and case details. ACEA data were extracted for University of Toronto anaesthesia residents from July 2017 to January 2020 from the programme's online assessment portal. Validity evidence was generated following Messick's validity framework, including response process, internal structure, relations with other variables, and consequences. Results: We analysed 8664 assessments for 137 residents completed by 342 assessors. From generalisability analysis, 10 independent observations (two assessments each from five assessors) were sufficient to achieve a reliability threshold of >= 0.70 for in-training assessments. A composite GRS score of 3.65/5 provided optimal sensitivity (93.6%) and specificity (90.8%) for determining entrustment on receiver operator characteristic curve analysis. Testeretest reliability was high (intraclass correlation coefficient [ICC2,1]=0.81) for matched assessments within 14 days of each other. Composite GRS scores differed significantly between residents based on their training level (P<0.0001) and correlated highly with overall independence (0.91, P<0.001). The internal consistency of the GRS (alpha=0.96) was excellent. Conclusions: This study supports the validity of the ACEA for assessing the competence of residents performing perioperative care and supports its use in competency-based anaesthesiology training.

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