临床医师对Mori等人的评论(1)。

M. Hall
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The study also confirms anecdotal reports from Canadian CIs that the CPI is lengthy, takes too long to complete, and is not always suited to the Canadian physiotherapy context.5 The new instrument developed by Mori and colleagues1 is a welcome addition to the evaluation of Canadian physiotherapy students, and I am sure many CIs will say it is long overdue! \n \nIn an era of evidence-informed practice, and in light of the principles of research we emphasize to the students in our programmes, both the physiotherapy community and our students should expect assessments of student performance to be grounded in evidence. Like the developers of the CPI, Mori and colleagues document a systematic and rigorous process for the initial development of their new instrument, the Canadian Physiotherapy Assessment of Clinical Performance (ACP).1 \n \nIn Phase 1, Mori and colleagues consulted widely with experts in assessment and measurement, as well as with experts in Canadian physiotherapy clinical education. Because the ACP was intended to be a national instrument, members of the National Association for Clinical Education in Physiotherapy (NACEP) and the Canadian Council of Physiotherapy Academic Programs (CCPUP) were invited to participate in the Delphi process, ensuring that the developers received feedback and input from all Canadian physiotherapy programmes before reaching consensus on the competencies to be included in the ACP. \n \nPhase 2 gathered feedback from academic experts in measurement and clinical education, as well as from end users (i.e., CIs and recent graduates), on the items to be included in the instrument, their understanding of these items, the rating scale to be used, and their overall impressions of the instrument. Cognitive interviewing is an important step in developing surveys and instruments like the ACP because it ensures that the questions or items are understood by the respondent (in this case, the CI or student) as the developers intended,6 as well as giving potential users an opportunity to provide input on usability. This is valuable feedback for Mori and colleagues as they consider the final format of the instrument; a representative sample of clinicians ensures the instrument will be usable and applicable to a variety of practice areas and practice settings. \n \nThe ACP is based on the roles and competencies described in the Essential Competency Profile for Physiotherapists in Canada (ECP).7 Physiotherapists practising in Canada should be able to demonstrate the knowledge, skills, and behaviours described in the ECP when they begin practice and throughout their physiotherapy career,7 and our students are evaluated against these markers while on clinical placement. Until now, however, Canadian students have been assessed using an instrument based on US practice standards, which, while similar to Canadian standards, differ in language and in practice context; as a result, some criteria – specifically, those that relate to billing and the economics of delivering physiotherapy services – have not been completed or evaluated.8 \n \nStudents will be familiar with the roles and competencies of the new ACP, as the ECP or components thereof will have been discussed in their classes. Because it is based on Canadian standards and practice, the ACP's language is inherently Canadian, and thus the instrument begins to address CIs' concern that the assessment instrument currently in use is not applicable to the Canadian context. \n \nA single national, standardized online assessment instrument has many benefits. Using a national instrument ensures that the same standards are being applied uniformly to assess physiotherapy students across the country and allows students to move easily between provinces to complete their clinical placements. In addition, a national online database will be a rich resource for research in Canadian physiotherapy clinical education. The arrival of a made-in-Canada assessment instrument for physiotherapy student performance, with sound psychometric properties, is long overdue, and the ACP is sure to be well received by CIs across the country.","PeriodicalId":390485,"journal":{"name":"Physiotherapy Canada. Physiotherapie Canada","volume":"43 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2015-07-21","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Clinician's Commentary on Mori et al.(1).\",\"authors\":\"M. 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Because the ACP was intended to be a national instrument, members of the National Association for Clinical Education in Physiotherapy (NACEP) and the Canadian Council of Physiotherapy Academic Programs (CCPUP) were invited to participate in the Delphi process, ensuring that the developers received feedback and input from all Canadian physiotherapy programmes before reaching consensus on the competencies to be included in the ACP. \\n \\nPhase 2 gathered feedback from academic experts in measurement and clinical education, as well as from end users (i.e., CIs and recent graduates), on the items to be included in the instrument, their understanding of these items, the rating scale to be used, and their overall impressions of the instrument. Cognitive interviewing is an important step in developing surveys and instruments like the ACP because it ensures that the questions or items are understood by the respondent (in this case, the CI or student) as the developers intended,6 as well as giving potential users an opportunity to provide input on usability. This is valuable feedback for Mori and colleagues as they consider the final format of the instrument; a representative sample of clinicians ensures the instrument will be usable and applicable to a variety of practice areas and practice settings. \\n \\nThe ACP is based on the roles and competencies described in the Essential Competency Profile for Physiotherapists in Canada (ECP).7 Physiotherapists practising in Canada should be able to demonstrate the knowledge, skills, and behaviours described in the ECP when they begin practice and throughout their physiotherapy career,7 and our students are evaluated against these markers while on clinical placement. Until now, however, Canadian students have been assessed using an instrument based on US practice standards, which, while similar to Canadian standards, differ in language and in practice context; as a result, some criteria – specifically, those that relate to billing and the economics of delivering physiotherapy services – have not been completed or evaluated.8 \\n \\nStudents will be familiar with the roles and competencies of the new ACP, as the ECP or components thereof will have been discussed in their classes. Because it is based on Canadian standards and practice, the ACP's language is inherently Canadian, and thus the instrument begins to address CIs' concern that the assessment instrument currently in use is not applicable to the Canadian context. \\n \\nA single national, standardized online assessment instrument has many benefits. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

临床教育是物理治疗学生培训的一个组成部分,约占加拿大所有物理治疗课程的三分之一。在临床实习或实习期间,物理治疗专业的学生发展和应用的知识,技能和必要的专业行为胜任入门级的做法,他们对这些临床能力进行评估,由物理治疗师主管或临床讲师(ci)。目前,大多数加拿大物理治疗学校使用物理治疗师临床表现工具(CPI)4来评估学生在临床实习期间的表现。CPI由24个项目或表现标准组成,它们共同被认为代表了物理治疗临床表现的各个方面。CPI是在美国开发的,经过严格的开发和测试,已被发现是一种有效和可靠的测量物理治疗学生表现的方法虽然CPI的心理测量特性已经确立,但加拿大最近的一项研究发现,CPI和对学生的评估是物理治疗师主动提出监督学生的障碍。该研究还证实了来自加拿大ci的轶事报告,即CPI很长,需要很长时间才能完成,并且并不总是适合加拿大的物理治疗环境Mori及其同事开发的新仪器是加拿大理疗专业学生评估的一个受欢迎的补充,我相信许多ci会说它姗姗来迟!在一个循证实践的时代,根据我们在课程中向学生强调的研究原则,物理治疗界和我们的学生都应该期望对学生表现的评估以证据为基础。就像CPI的开发者一样,Mori和他的同事们为他们的新仪器——加拿大物理治疗临床表现评估(ACP)——的初始开发记录了一个系统和严格的过程在第一阶段,Mori及其同事广泛咨询了评估和测量方面的专家以及加拿大物理治疗临床教育方面的专家。由于ACP旨在成为一项全国性的工具,全国物理治疗临床教育协会(NACEP)和加拿大物理治疗学术项目委员会(CCPUP)的成员被邀请参加德尔菲过程,以确保开发者在就ACP所包含的能力达成共识之前收到来自所有加拿大物理治疗项目的反馈和输入。第二阶段收集了测量和临床教育方面的学术专家以及最终用户(即ci和最近的毕业生)关于仪器中要包含的项目、他们对这些项目的理解、要使用的评分量表以及他们对仪器的总体印象的反馈。认知访谈是开发像ACP这样的调查和工具的重要步骤,因为它确保了问题或项目被受访者(在这种情况下,CI或学生)理解,正如开发人员所希望的那样,6同时也给潜在用户提供了一个提供可用性输入的机会。这对Mori及其同事来说是宝贵的反馈,因为他们正在考虑该工具的最终格式;临床医生的代表性样本确保仪器将是可用的,适用于各种实践领域和实践设置。ACP是基于加拿大物理治疗师基本能力简介(ECP)中所描述的角色和能力在加拿大执业的物理治疗师应该能够在他们开始执业和整个物理治疗职业生涯中展示ECP中描述的知识、技能和行为,我们的学生在临床实习时根据这些标记进行评估。然而,到目前为止,加拿大学生一直使用基于美国实践标准的工具进行评估,尽管美国标准与加拿大标准相似,但在语言和实践背景上有所不同;因此,一些标准-特别是那些与计费和提供物理治疗服务的经济相关的标准-尚未完成或评估学生将熟悉新ACP的角色和能力,因为ECP或其组成部分将在课堂上进行讨论。因为它是以加拿大的标准和实践为基础的,所以ACP的语言本身就是加拿大的,因此该文书开始解决CIs的关切,即目前使用的评估文书不适用于加拿大情况。单一的国家标准化在线评估工具有很多好处。使用国家标准可以确保在全国范围内统一应用相同的标准来评估物理治疗专业的学生,并允许学生轻松地在各省之间转移以完成临床实习。 此外,国家在线数据库将成为加拿大物理治疗临床教育研究的丰富资源。加拿大制造的物理治疗学生表现评估工具的到来,具有良好的心理测量特性,是姗姗来迟的,ACP肯定会受到全国ci的欢迎。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Clinician's Commentary on Mori et al.(1).
Clinical education is an integral component of physiotherapy student training,2,3 comprising approximately one-third of all coursework in physiotherapy programmes across Canada. During clinical placements or internships, physiotherapy students develop and apply the knowledge, skills, and professional behaviours necessary for competent entry-level practice, and they are evaluated on these clinical competencies by physiotherapist supervisors or clinical instructors (CIs). At present, most Canadian physiotherapy schools use the Physical Therapist Clinical Performance Instrument (CPI)4 to assess students' performance during their clinical placements. The CPI consists of 24 items or performance criteria that, together, are considered to represent all aspects of physiotherapy clinical performance. Developed in the United States, the CPI has undergone rigorous development and testing and has been found to be a valid and reliable measure of physiotherapy student performance.4 While the CPI's psychometric properties have been established, a recent Canadian study5 identified the CPI and the evaluation of students as a barrier to physiotherapists' offering to supervise a student. The study also confirms anecdotal reports from Canadian CIs that the CPI is lengthy, takes too long to complete, and is not always suited to the Canadian physiotherapy context.5 The new instrument developed by Mori and colleagues1 is a welcome addition to the evaluation of Canadian physiotherapy students, and I am sure many CIs will say it is long overdue! In an era of evidence-informed practice, and in light of the principles of research we emphasize to the students in our programmes, both the physiotherapy community and our students should expect assessments of student performance to be grounded in evidence. Like the developers of the CPI, Mori and colleagues document a systematic and rigorous process for the initial development of their new instrument, the Canadian Physiotherapy Assessment of Clinical Performance (ACP).1 In Phase 1, Mori and colleagues consulted widely with experts in assessment and measurement, as well as with experts in Canadian physiotherapy clinical education. Because the ACP was intended to be a national instrument, members of the National Association for Clinical Education in Physiotherapy (NACEP) and the Canadian Council of Physiotherapy Academic Programs (CCPUP) were invited to participate in the Delphi process, ensuring that the developers received feedback and input from all Canadian physiotherapy programmes before reaching consensus on the competencies to be included in the ACP. Phase 2 gathered feedback from academic experts in measurement and clinical education, as well as from end users (i.e., CIs and recent graduates), on the items to be included in the instrument, their understanding of these items, the rating scale to be used, and their overall impressions of the instrument. Cognitive interviewing is an important step in developing surveys and instruments like the ACP because it ensures that the questions or items are understood by the respondent (in this case, the CI or student) as the developers intended,6 as well as giving potential users an opportunity to provide input on usability. This is valuable feedback for Mori and colleagues as they consider the final format of the instrument; a representative sample of clinicians ensures the instrument will be usable and applicable to a variety of practice areas and practice settings. The ACP is based on the roles and competencies described in the Essential Competency Profile for Physiotherapists in Canada (ECP).7 Physiotherapists practising in Canada should be able to demonstrate the knowledge, skills, and behaviours described in the ECP when they begin practice and throughout their physiotherapy career,7 and our students are evaluated against these markers while on clinical placement. Until now, however, Canadian students have been assessed using an instrument based on US practice standards, which, while similar to Canadian standards, differ in language and in practice context; as a result, some criteria – specifically, those that relate to billing and the economics of delivering physiotherapy services – have not been completed or evaluated.8 Students will be familiar with the roles and competencies of the new ACP, as the ECP or components thereof will have been discussed in their classes. Because it is based on Canadian standards and practice, the ACP's language is inherently Canadian, and thus the instrument begins to address CIs' concern that the assessment instrument currently in use is not applicable to the Canadian context. A single national, standardized online assessment instrument has many benefits. Using a national instrument ensures that the same standards are being applied uniformly to assess physiotherapy students across the country and allows students to move easily between provinces to complete their clinical placements. In addition, a national online database will be a rich resource for research in Canadian physiotherapy clinical education. The arrival of a made-in-Canada assessment instrument for physiotherapy student performance, with sound psychometric properties, is long overdue, and the ACP is sure to be well received by CIs across the country.
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