Consensus-based statements for assessing clinical competency in podiatry-related work integrated learning.

IF 2.5 3区 医学 Q1 ORTHOPEDICS
Ryan S Causby, Sindhrani Dars, Malia Ho, Steven Walmsley, Shannon Munteanu, Helen A Banwell
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: The training of undergraduate and graduate-entry podiatry students in Australia and New Zealand includes practical sessions in a simulated and real-life clinical setting and Work Integrated Learning (WIL) comprising professional clinical placements. Student performance during WIL is evaluated by their Clinical Educators using clinical competency tools. Having a standardised and validated clinical assessment tool for WIL in podiatry would facilitate consistency in assessment, promote standardisation between programs, and ensure that all podiatry students are assessed against a set of criteria over the course of their clinical programs to the point of threshold clinical competency. Therefore, the aim of this study was to develop a series of consensus-based statements via Delphi technique as the first step towards developing guidelines to direct the assessment of podiatry students during WIL.

Methods: This study used a three-round modified Delphi consensus method. A panel of 25 stakeholders was sought. Specifically, representation from each of the universities in Australia and New Zealand who provide entry level programs, Clinical Educators, podiatry student representatives, new podiatry graduates and consumers (podiatrists hiring new graduates). The survey for Round 1 aimed for consensus and consisted of five open-ended questions. Questions one to three asked respondents to nominate what they considered were the important elements that needed to be assessed for podiatry students undertaking WIL for: Clinical performance/skills, Communication and Professional behaviour, Question 4 asked respondents to identify further/other elements of importance, whilst Question 5 asked a) how these elements should be evaluated and b) how should overall competency and ability to progress within the program be determined. Round 2 and 3 aimed to gather agreement and the questions were based on the responses from previous rounds.

Results: Twenty-five participants agreed to participate, 17 females (68%) and eight males (32%). The panel consisted of 10 podiatry educators (40%), nine Clinical Educators (36%), two student representatives (8%), two new podiatry graduates (8%) and two consumers (8%). From the 25 recruited participants, 21 responded to Round one, 18 to Round two and 17 in Round three. At the conclusion of the Delphi survey, 55 statements had reached consensus or agreement.

Conclusions: This Delphi study is the first of its kind for the podiatry profession to develop consensus-based statements regarding the assessment of WIL. Fifty-five statements pertinent to the assessment of WIL were identified. This is an important first step toward the development of a consistent WIL assessment tool which may be applied across entry-level podiatry programs across Australia and New Zealand.

Abstract Image

Abstract Image

基于共识的足病相关工作综合学习临床能力评估声明。
背景:在澳大利亚和新西兰,对本科生和研究生入学足科学生的培训包括模拟和真实临床环境中的实践课程,以及由专业临床实习组成的 "工作综合学习"(WIL)。学生在 WIL 期间的表现由临床教育工作者使用临床能力工具进行评估。为足病专业的 WIL 制定标准化且经过验证的临床评估工具将有助于评估的一致性,促进不同课程之间的标准化,并确保所有足病专业学生在临床课程期间都能根据一套标准进行评估,以达到临床能力的临界点。因此,本研究的目的是通过德尔菲技术制定一系列基于共识的声明,作为制定指导足病专业学生在西雅图学习期间进行评估的指南的第一步:本研究采用了三轮改良德尔菲共识法。研究小组由 25 名利益相关者组成。特别是来自澳大利亚和新西兰提供入门级课程的各所大学的代表、临床教育工作者、足病专业学生代表、足病专业应届毕业生和消费者(雇用应届毕业生的足病医生)。第一轮调查旨在达成共识,包括五个开放式问题。问题一至问题三要求受访者提出他们认为足病专业学生在学习 WIL 课程时需要评估的重要内容:问题四要求受访者确定更多/其他重要因素,而问题五则询问 a) 应如何评估这些因素,以及 b) 应如何确定学生的整体能力和在课程中取得进步的能力。第二轮和第三轮的目的是收集一致意见,这些问题都是基于前几轮的回答:25 名参与者同意参加,其中 17 名女性(68%),8 名男性(32%)。小组成员包括 10 名足病教育工作者(40%)、9 名临床教育工作者(36%)、2 名学生代表(8%)、2 名刚毕业的足病专业学生(8%)和 2 名消费者(8%)。在招募的 25 名参与者中,21 人参加了第一轮,18 人参加了第二轮,17 人参加了第三轮。德尔菲调查结束时,有 55 项陈述达成了共识或一致意见:这项德尔菲研究是足病学界首次就 WIL 评估制定基于共识的声明。研究确定了 55 项与 WIL 评估相关的声明。这是朝着开发统一的 WIL 评估工具迈出的重要的第一步,该工具可应用于澳大利亚和新西兰的入门级足病课程。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
10.30%
发文量
83
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Foot and Ankle Research, the official journal of the Australian Podiatry Association and The College of Podiatry (UK), is an open access journal that encompasses all aspects of policy, organisation, delivery and clinical practice related to the assessment, diagnosis, prevention and management of foot and ankle disorders. Journal of Foot and Ankle Research covers a wide range of clinical subject areas, including diabetology, paediatrics, sports medicine, gerontology and geriatrics, foot surgery, physical therapy, dermatology, wound management, radiology, biomechanics and bioengineering, orthotics and prosthetics, as well the broad areas of epidemiology, policy, organisation and delivery of services related to foot and ankle care. The journal encourages submissions from all health professionals who manage lower limb conditions, including podiatrists, nurses, physical therapists and physiotherapists, orthopaedists, manual therapists, medical specialists and general medical practitioners, as well as health service researchers concerned with foot and ankle care. The Australian Podiatry Association and the College of Podiatry (UK) have reserve funds to cover the article-processing charge for manuscripts submitted by its members. Society members can email the appropriate contact at Australian Podiatry Association or The College of Podiatry to obtain the corresponding code to enter on submission.
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