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An Innovative Method to Assess Clinical Reasoning Skills: Clinical Reasoning Tests in the Second National Medical Science Olympiad in Iran Publisher



Amini M1 ; Moghadami M1 ; Kojuri J1 ; Abbasi H1 ; Abadi AA2 ; Molaee N3 ; Pishbin E4 ; Javadzade H5 ; Kasmaee V6 ; Vakili H7 ; Sadat MA8 ; Akbari R7 ; Omidvar B9 ; Shafaghi A6 Show All Authors
Authors
  1. Amini M1
  2. Moghadami M1
  3. Kojuri J1
  4. Abbasi H1
  5. Abadi AA2
  6. Molaee N3
  7. Pishbin E4
  8. Javadzade H5
  9. Kasmaee V6
  10. Vakili H7
  11. Sadat MA8
  12. Akbari R7
  13. Omidvar B9
  14. Shafaghi A6
  15. Dehbozorgian M1
  16. Jafari M1
  17. Monajemi A10
  18. Arabshahi K11
  19. Adibi P12, 13
  20. Charlin B14
Show Affiliations
Authors Affiliations
  1. 1. Education Development and Research Center, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran
  2. 2. Emam Hosien Hospital Emergency Department, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
  3. 3. Internal Medicine Aliebneabitaleb Hospital, Zahedan University of Medical Sciences, Zahedan, Iran
  4. 4. Emam Reza Emergency Medicine Department, Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Mashhad, Iran
  5. 5. Emergency Medicine Department, Baghiatallah Hospital, Baghiatallah University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
  6. 6. Department of Emergency Medicine, Guilan University of Medical Science, Rasht, Iran
  7. 7. Internal Medicine Department, Babol University of Medical Sciences, Babol, Iran
  8. 8. Pediatric General Surgery, Islamic Azad University, Mashhad Branch, Mashhad, Iran
  9. 9. Internal Medicine Department, Ahwaz Hospital, Ahwaz University of Medical Sciences, Ahwaz, Iran
  10. 10. Medical Humanities Research Group, Tehran, Institute for Humanities and Cultural Studies, Tehran, Iran
  11. 11. Firozgar Hospital of Internal Medicine, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
  12. 12. Integrative Functional Gastroenterology Research Centers, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran
  13. 13. Department of the Olympiad Technical Committee, Ministry of Health and Medical Education, Tehran, Iran
  14. 14. Recherche et Developpement, Centre de Pedagogie Appliquee Aux Sciences de la Sante, Montreal University, Montreal, Canada

Source: BMC Research Notes Published:2011


Abstract

Background: Clinical reasoning plays a major role in the ability of doctors to make a diagnosis and reach treatment decisions. This paper describes the use of four clinical reasoning tests in the second National Medical Science Olympiad in Iran: key features (KF), script concordance (SCT), clinical reasoning problems (CRP) and comprehensive integrative puzzles (CIP). The purpose of the study was to design a multi instrument for multiple roles approach in clinical reasoning field based on the theoretical framework, KF was used to measure data gathering, CRP was used to measure hypothesis formation, SCT and CIP were used to measure hypothesis evaluation and investigating the combined use of these tests in the Olympiad. A bank of clinical reasoning test items was developed for emergency medicine by a scientific expert committee representing all the medical schools in the country. These items were pretested by a reference group and the results were analyzed to select items that could be omitted. Then 135 top-ranked medical students from 45 medical universities in Iran participated in the clinical domain of the Olympiad. The reliability of each test was calculated by Cronbach's alpha. Item difficulty and the correlation between each item and the total score were measured. The correlation between the students' final grade and each of the clinical reasoning tests was calculated, as was the correlation between final grades and another measure of knowledge, i.e., the students' grade point average. Results: The combined reliability for all four clinical reasoning tests was 0.91. Of the four clinical reasoning tests we compared, reliability was highest for CIP (0.91). The reliability was 0.83 for KF, 0.78 for SCT and 0.71 for CRP. Most of the tests had an acceptable item difficulty level between 0.2 and 0.8. The correlation between the score for each item and the total test score for each of the four tests was positive. The correlations between scores for each test and total score were highest for KF and CIP. The correlation between scores for each test and grade point average was low to intermediate for all four of the tests. Conclusion: The combination of these four clinical reasoning tests is a reliable evaluation tool that can be implemented to assess clinical reasoning skills in talented undergraduate medical students, however these data may not generalizable to whole medical students population. The CIP and KF tests showed the greatest potential to measure clinical reasoning skills. Grade point averages did not necessarily predict performance in the clinical domain of the national competitive examination for medical school students. © 2011 Moghadami et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.