On the validity of summative entrustment decisions

Claire Touchie*, Benjamin Kinnear, Daniel Schumacher, Holly Caretta-Weyer, Stanley J. Hamstra, Danielle Hart, Larry Gruppen, Shelley Ross, Eric Warm, Olle ten Cate,

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

Health care revolves around trust. Patients are often in a position that gives them no other choice than to trust the people taking care of them. Educational programs thus have the responsibility to develop physicians who can be trusted to deliver safe and effective care, ultimately making a final decision to entrust trainees to graduate to unsupervised practice. Such entrustment decisions deserve to be scrutinized for their validity. This end-of-training entrustment decision is arguably the most important one, although earlier entrustment decisions, for smaller units of professional practice, should also be scrutinized for their validity. Validity of entrustment decisions implies a defensible argument that can be analyzed in components that together support the decision. According to Kane, building a validity argument is a process designed to support inferences of scoring, generalization across observations, extrapolation to new instances, and implications of the decision. A lack of validity can be caused by inadequate evidence in terms of, according to Messick, content, response process, internal structure (coherence) and relationship to other variables, and in misinterpreted consequences. These two leading frameworks (Kane and Messick) in educational and psychological testing can be well applied to summative entrustment decision-making. The authors elaborate the types of questions that need to be answered to arrive at defensible, well-argued summative decisions regarding performance to provide a grounding for high-quality safe patient care.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)780-787
Number of pages8
JournalMedical Teacher
Volume43
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2021

Keywords

  • Assessment: general
  • learning outcomes: decision-making
  • teaching and learning: work-based
  • Decision Making
  • Clinical Competence
  • Internship and Residency
  • Physicians
  • Humans
  • Competency-Based Education
  • Trust

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'On the validity of summative entrustment decisions'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this