Development and Testing of Screen-Based and Psychometric Instruments for Assessing Resident Performance in an Operating Room Simulator

Author:

McNeer Richard R.12,Dudaryk Roman1,Nedeff Nicholas B.1,Bennett Christopher L.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Anesthesiology, University of Miami, Ryder Trauma Center, 1800 NW 10 Avenue, Miami, FL 33136, USA

2. Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Miami, Ryder Trauma Center, 1800 NW 10 Avenue, Miami, FL 33136, USA

3. Music Engineering Technology, University of Miami, Frost School of Music, 1550 Brescia Avenue, Founder’s Hall Rm 140, Coral Gables, FL 33146, USA

Abstract

Introduction. Medical simulators are used for assessing clinical skills and increasingly for testing hypotheses. We developed and tested an approach for assessing performance in anesthesia residents using screen-based simulation that ensures expert raters remain blinded to subject identity and experimental condition.Methods. Twenty anesthesia residents managed emergencies in an operating room simulator by logging actions through a custom graphical user interface. Two expert raters rated performance based on these entries using custom Global Rating Scale (GRS) and Crisis Management Checklist (CMC) instruments. Interrater reliability was measured by calculating intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC), and internal consistency of the instruments was assessed with Cronbach’s alpha. Agreement between GRS and CMC was measured using Spearman rank correlation (SRC).Results. Interrater agreement (GRS: ICC = 0.825, CMC: ICC = 0.878) and internal consistency (GRS: alpha = 0.838, CMC: alpha = 0.886) were good for both instruments. Subscale analysis indicated that several instrument items can be discarded. GRS and CMC scores were highly correlated (SRC = 0.948).Conclusions. In this pilot study, we demonstrated that screen-based simulation can allow blinded assessment of performance. GRS and CMC instruments demonstrated good rater agreement and internal consistency. We plan to further test construct validity of our instruments by measuring performance in our simulator as a function of training level.

Funder

Anesthesia Patient Safety Foundation

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine

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