Volume 22, Issue 7 pp. 838-844
Educational Advance
Free Access

Initial Validity Analysis of the Emergency Medicine Milestones

Michael S. Beeson MD, MBA

Michael S. Beeson MD, MBA

The Department of Emergency Medicine, Akron General Medical Center, Akron, OH

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Eric S. Holmboe MD

Eric S. Holmboe MD

Milestones Development and Evaluation, Chicago, IL

Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, Chicago, IL

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Robert C. Korte PhD

Robert C. Korte PhD

American Board of Emergency Medicine, East Lansing, MI

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Thomas J. Nasca MD, MACP

Thomas J. Nasca MD, MACP

Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, Chicago, IL

Jefferson Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA

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Timothy Brigham MDiv, PhD

Timothy Brigham MDiv, PhD

Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education, Chicago, IL

Jefferson Medical Center, Philadelphia, PA

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Chad M. Russ MS

Chad M. Russ MS

American Board of Emergency Medicine, East Lansing, MI

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Cameron T. Whitley MA

Cameron T. Whitley MA

The Department of Sociology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI

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Earl J. Reisdorff MD

Corresponding Author

Earl J. Reisdorff MD

American Board of Emergency Medicine, East Lansing, MI

Address for correspondence and reprints: Earl J. Reisdorff, MD; e-mail: [email protected].Search for more papers by this author
First published: 25 June 2015
Citations: 63
Dr. Beeson is a director for the American Board of Emergency Medicine. Drs. Holmboe, Nasca, and Brigham are employed by the Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education. Dr. Korte, Mr. Russ, and Dr. Reisdorff are employed by the American Board of Emergency Medicine. None of the investigators received financial compensation for the reported activity.
A related article appears on page 847.

Abstract

Objectives

The Accreditation Council for Graduate Medical Education (ACGME) Milestones describe behavioral markers for the progressive acquisition of competencies during residency. As a key component of the Next Accreditation System, all residents are evaluated for the acquisition of specialty-specific Milestones. The objective was to determine the validity and reliability of the emergency medicine (EM) Milestones.

Methods

The ACGME and the American Board of Emergency Medicine performed this single-event observational study. The data included the initial EM Milestones performance ratings of all categorical EM residents submitted to the ACGME from October 31, 2013, to January 6, 2014. Mean performance ratings were determined for all 23 subcompetencies for every year of residency training. The internal consistency (reliability) of the Milestones was determined using a standardized Cronbach's alpha coefficient. Exploratory factor analysis was conducted to determine how the subcompetencies were interrelated.

Results

EM Milestone performance ratings were obtained on 100% of EM residents (n = 5,805) from 162 residency programs. The mean performance ratings of the aggregate and individual subcompetency scores showed discrimination between residency years, and the factor structure further supported the validity of the EM Milestones. The reliability was α = 0.96 within each year of training.

Conclusions

The EM Milestones demonstrated validity and reliability as an assessment instrument for competency acquisition. EM residents can be assured that this evaluation process has demonstrated validity and reliability; faculty can be confident that the Milestones are psychometrically sound; and stakeholders can know that the Milestones are a nationally standardized, objective measure of specialty-specific competency acquisition.

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