Back to Search Start Over

A hypothesis-driven physical examination learning and assessment procedure for medical students: initial validity evidence

Authors :
Georges Bordage
Rachel Yudkowsky
Hiroshi Nishigori
Tali Lowenstein
Junji Otaki
Janet Riddle
Source :
Medical Education. 43:729-740
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Wiley, 2009.

Abstract

Context Diagnostic accuracy is maximised by having clinical signs and diagnostic hypotheses in mind during the physical examination (PE). This diagnostic reasoning approach contrasts with the rote, hypothesis-free screening PE learned by many medical students. A hypothesis-driven PE (HDPE) learning and assessment procedure was developed to provide targeted practice and assessment in anticipating, eliciting and interpreting critical aspects of the PE in the context of diagnostic challenges. Objectives This study was designed to obtain initial content validity evidence, performance and reliability estimates, and impact data for the HDPE procedure. Methods Nineteen clinical scenarios were developed, covering 160 PE manoeuvres. A total of 66 Year 3 medical students prepared for and encountered three clinical scenarios during required formative assessments. For each case, students listed anticipated positive PE findings for two plausible diagnoses before examining the patient; examined a standardised patient (SP) simulating one of the diagnoses; received immediate feedback from the SP, and documented their findings and working diagnosis. The same students later encountered some of the scenarios during their Year 4 clinical skills examination. Results On average, Year 3 students anticipated 65% of the positive findings, correctly performed 88% of the PE manoeuvres and documented 61% of the findings. Year 4 students anticipated and elicited fewer findings overall, but achieved proportionally more discriminating findings, thereby more efficiently achieving a diagnostic accuracy equivalent to that of students in Year 3. Year 4 students performed better on cases on which they had received feedback as Year 3 students. Twelve cases would provide a reliability of 0.80, based on discriminating checklist items only. Conclusions The HDPE provided medical students with a thoughtful, deliberate approach to learning and assessing PE skills in a valid and reliable manner.

Details

ISSN :
13652923 and 03080110
Volume :
43
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Medical Education
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....caf2cdbf47d3f6082169e493a2d3a95e