Assessing Telemedicine Competencies: Developing and Validating Learner Measures for Simulation-Based Telemedicine Training.

Telemedicine competency curriculum development education and training teaching innovation

Journal

AMIA ... Annual Symposium proceedings. AMIA Symposium
ISSN: 1942-597X
Titre abrégé: AMIA Annu Symp Proc
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 101209213

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
2023
Historique:
medline: 15 1 2024
pubmed: 15 1 2024
entrez: 15 1 2024
Statut: epublish

Résumé

In 2021, the Association of American Medical Colleges published Telehealth Competencies Across the Learning Continuum, a roadmap for designing telemedicine curricula and evaluating learners. While this document advances educators' shared understanding of telemedicine's core content and performance expectations, it does not include turn-key-ready evaluation instruments. At the University of Oklahoma School of Community Medicine, we developed a year-long telemedicine curriculum for third-year medical and second-year physician assistant students. We used the AAMC framework to create program objectives and instructional simulations. We designed and piloted an assessment rubric for eight AAMC competencies to accompany the simulations. In this monograph, we describe the rubric development, scores for students participating in simulations, and results comparing inter-rater reliability between faculty and standardized patient evaluators. Our preliminary work suggests that our rubric provides a practical method for evaluating learners by faculty during telemedicine simulations. We also identified opportunities for additional reliability and validity testing.

Identifiants

pubmed: 38222442
pii: 996
pmc: PMC10785836

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

474-483

Informations de copyright

©2023 AMIA - All rights reserved.

Auteurs

Blake Lesselroth (B)

University of Oklahoma-Tulsa, School of Community Medicine, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA.

Helen Monkman (H)

University of Oklahoma-Tulsa, School of Community Medicine, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA.

Ryan Palmer (R)

MKP Creative, Chicago, Illinois, USA.

Craig Kuziemsky (C)

MacEwan University, Office of Research Services, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

Andrew Liew (A)

University of Oklahoma-Tulsa, School of Community Medicine, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA.

Kristin Foulks (K)

University of Oklahoma-Tulsa, School of Community Medicine, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA.

Deirdra Kelly (D)

University of Oklahoma-Tulsa, School of Community Medicine, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA.

Ainsly Wolfinbarger (A)

University of Oklahoma-Tulsa, School of Community Medicine, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA.

Frances Wen (F)

University of Oklahoma-Tulsa, School of Community Medicine, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA.

Liz Kollaja (L)

University of Oklahoma-Tulsa, School of Community Medicine, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA.

Shannon Ijams (S)

University of Oklahoma-Tulsa, School of Community Medicine, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA.

Juell Homco (J)

University of Oklahoma-Tulsa, School of Community Medicine, Tulsa, Oklahoma, USA.

Classifications MeSH