4.6 Article

Development of a Clinical Reasoning Documentation Assessment Tool for Resident and Fellow Admission Notes: a Shared Mental Model for Feedback

期刊

JOURNAL OF GENERAL INTERNAL MEDICINE
卷 37, 期 3, 页码 507-512

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11606-021-06805-6

关键词

clinical reasoning; documentation; assessment; feedback

资金

  1. NYU Grossman School of Medicine
  2. Program for Medical Education Innovations and Research

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The study aimed to develop a valid and reliable assessment tool for clinical reasoning documentation to improve the documentation quality of residents and fellows. The tool, with detailed descriptive prompts and a new scoring range, enhanced the quality assessment standard of clinical reasoning documentation, with results showing that less than half of the notes were classified as high-quality.
Background Residents and fellows receive little feedback on their clinical reasoning documentation. Barriers include lack of a shared mental model and variability in the reliability and validity of existing assessment tools. Of the existing tools, the IDEA assessment tool includes a robust assessment of clinical reasoning documentation focusing on four elements (interpretive summary, differential diagnosis, explanation of reasoning for lead and alternative diagnoses) but lacks descriptive anchors threatening its reliability. Objective Our goal was to develop a valid and reliable assessment tool for clinical reasoning documentation building off the IDEA assessment tool. Design, Participants, and Main Measures The Revised-IDEA assessment tool was developed by four clinician educators through iterative review of admission notes written by medicine residents and fellows and subsequently piloted with additional faculty to ensure response process validity. A random sample of 252 notes from July 2014 to June 2017 written by 30 trainees across several chief complaints was rated. Three raters rated 20% of the notes to demonstrate internal structure validity. A quality cut-off score was determined using Hofstee standard setting. Key Results The Revised-IDEA assessment tool includes the same four domains as the IDEA assessment tool with more detailed descriptive prompts, new Likert scale anchors, and a score range of 0-10. Intraclass correlation was high for the notes rated by three raters, 0.84 (95% CI 0.74-0.90). Scores >= 6 were determined to demonstrate high-quality clinical reasoning documentation. Only 53% of notes (134/252) were high-quality. Conclusions The Revised-IDEA assessment tool is reliable and easy to use for feedback on clinical reasoning documentation in resident and fellow admission notes with descriptive anchors that facilitate a shared mental model for feedback.

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