Volume 21, Issue 8 pp. 905-911
Educational Advance
Free Access

Medical Student Milestones in Emergency Medicine

Hitos del Estudiante de Medicina en Medicina de Urgencias y Emergencias

Sally A. Santen MD, PhD

Corresponding Author

Sally A. Santen MD, PhD

Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, MI

Address for correspondence and reprints: Sally Santen, MD, PhD; e-mail: [email protected].Search for more papers by this author
William J. Peterson

William J. Peterson

University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, MI

Search for more papers by this author
Sorabh Khandelwal MD

Sorabh Khandelwal MD

Department of Emergency Medicine, The Ohio State University Medical Center, Columbus, OH

Search for more papers by this author
Joseph B. House MD

Joseph B. House MD

Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, MI

Search for more papers by this author
David E. Manthey MD

David E. Manthey MD

Department of Emergency Medicine, Wake Forest Baptist Health Center, Winston-Salem, NC

Search for more papers by this author
Cemal B. Sozener MD

Cemal B. Sozener MD

Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, MI

Search for more papers by this author
First published: 24 August 2014
Citations: 25
The authors have no relevant financial information or potential conflicts of interest to disclose.

Abstract

en

Objectives

Medical education is a continuum from medical school through residency to unsupervised clinical practice. There has been a movement toward competency-based medical education prompted by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) using milestones to assess competence. While implementation of milestones for residents sets specific standards for transition to internship, there exists a need for the development of competency-based instruments to assess medical students as they progress toward internship. The objective of this study was to develop competency-based milestones for fourth-year medical students completing their emergency medicine (EM) clerkships (regardless of whether the students were planning on entering EM) using a rigorous method to attain validity evidence.

Methods

A literature review was performed to develop a list of potential milestones. An expert panel, which included a medical student and 23 faculty members (four program directors, 16 clerkship directors, and five assistant deans) from 19 different institutions, came to consensus on these milestones through two rounds of a modified Delphi protocol. The Delphi technique builds content validity and is an accepted method to develop consensus by eliciting expert opinions through multiple rounds of questionnaires.

Results

Of the initial 39 milestones, 12 were removed at the end of round 1 due to low agreement on importance of the milestone or because of redundancy with other milestones. An additional 12 milestones were revised to improve clarity or eliminate redundancy, and one was added based on expert panelists' suggestions. Of the 28 milestones moving to round 2, consensus with a high level of agreement was achieved for 24. These were mapped to the ACGME EM residency milestone competency domains, as well as the Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) core entrustable professional activities for entering residency to improve content validity.

Conclusions

This study found consensus support by experts for a list of 24 milestones relevant to the assessment of fourth-year medical student performance by the completion of their EM clerkships. The findings are useful for development of a valid method for assessing medical student performance as students approach residency.

Resumen

es

Objetivos

La formación médica es un continuo que va desde la universidad, pasando por la residencia, hasta la práctica clínica no supervisada. Ha habido un movimiento hacia la formación médica basada en la adquisición de competencias promovido por el Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) mediante los hitos para evaluar la competencia. Mientras la implementación de los hitos para los residentes establece normas específicas para la transición a residente, existe necesidad de desarrollar instrumentos basados en la competencia para evaluar a los estudiantes de medicina según progresan hacia la residencia. El objetivo de este estudio fue desarrollar los hitos basados ​​en competencias para los estudiantes de medicina de cuarto año al completar sus prácticas clínicas en Medicina de Urgencias y Emergencias (MUE) (indistintamente si el estudiante planeaba acceder a la MUE) utilizando un método riguroso para lograr evidencia válida.

Metodología

Se realizó una revisión de la literatura para desarrollar una lista de hitos potenciales. Un panel de expertos, que incluyó 23 profesores de la facultad cuyas responsabilidades eran directores de programa (4), directores de prácticas clínicas (16), vicedecanos (5) y un estudiante de medicina de 19 instituciones diferentes, llegaron a un consenso sobre estos hitos a través de 2 rondas del protocolo de Delphi modificado. La técnica Delphi construye un contenido válido y es un método aceptado para desarrollar un consenso mediante la obtención de opiniones de expertos a través de múltiples rondas de preguntas.

Resultados

De los 39 hitos iniciales, se eliminaron 12 al final de la primera ronda debido al bajo acuerdo sobre la importancia del hito o debido a su redundancia con otros hitos. Se revisaron 12 hitos adicionales para mejorar la claridad o eliminar la redundancia, y se añadió uno basado en las sugerencias del panel de expertos. De los 28 hitos que llegaron a la segunda ronda, se alcanzó un consenso con un alto nivel de acuerdo para 24 de los hitos. Estos hitos se esquematizaron a los dominios de competencia de los hitos de la residencia de MUE del ACGME, así como a las actividades profesionales recomendadas para acceder a la residencia de la Association of American Medical Colleges (AAMC) para mejorar la validez de contenido.

Conclusiones

Este estudio llegó a un consenso apoyado por expertos para una lista de 24 hitos relevantes para evaluar el rendimiento de los estudiantes de medicina de cuarto año al finalizar su práctica clínica en MUE. Los hallazgos son útiles para el desarrollo de un método válido para evaluar el rendimiento de los estudiantes de medicina a medida que éstos se acercan a la residencia.

The full text of this article hosted at iucr.org is unavailable due to technical difficulties.