TY - JOUR
T1 - Faculty Versus Resident Self-Assessment Using Pathology Milestones
T2 - How Aligned Are We?
AU - Athy, Sienna
AU - Talmon, Geoffrey
AU - Samson, Kaeli
AU - Martin, Kimberly
AU - Nelson, Kari
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2021.
PY - 2021/12/13
Y1 - 2021/12/13
N2 - Competent physicians must be able to self-assess skill level; however, previous studies suggest that medical trainees may not accurately self-assess. We utilized Pathology Milestones (PM) data to determine whether there were discrepancies in self- versus Clinical Competency Committee (CCC) ratings by sex, program year (PGY), time of evaluation, and question category (Patient Care, Medical Knowledge, Systems-Based Practice [SBP], Practice-Based Learning and Improvement [PBL], Professionalism [PRO], and Interpersonal and Communication Skills) and Residency In-Service Examination (RISE) score. We completed retrospective analyses of PM evaluation scores from 2016 to 2019 (n = 23 residents) 2 times per year. Discrepancies in evaluation scores were calculated by subtracting CCC scores from resident self-evaluation scores. There was no significant difference in discrepancy scores between male versus female residents (P =.94). Discrepancy scores among all PGYs were significantly different (P <.0001), with PGY1 tending to overrate the most, followed by PGY2. PGY3 and PGY4 underrated themselves on average compared to CCC ratings, with PGY4 having significantly lower self-ratings than CCC compared to any other PGY. In January, residents underscored themselves and in July residents overscored themselves compared to CCC (P <.0001 for both). Question types resulted in variable discrepancy scores, with SBP significantly lower than and PRO significantly higher than all other categories (P <.05 for both). Increases in RISE score correlated to increases in self- and CCC-scoring. These discrepancies can help trainees improve self-assessment. Discrepancies indicate potential areas for amelioration, such as curriculum adjustments or Milestone’s verbiage.
AB - Competent physicians must be able to self-assess skill level; however, previous studies suggest that medical trainees may not accurately self-assess. We utilized Pathology Milestones (PM) data to determine whether there were discrepancies in self- versus Clinical Competency Committee (CCC) ratings by sex, program year (PGY), time of evaluation, and question category (Patient Care, Medical Knowledge, Systems-Based Practice [SBP], Practice-Based Learning and Improvement [PBL], Professionalism [PRO], and Interpersonal and Communication Skills) and Residency In-Service Examination (RISE) score. We completed retrospective analyses of PM evaluation scores from 2016 to 2019 (n = 23 residents) 2 times per year. Discrepancies in evaluation scores were calculated by subtracting CCC scores from resident self-evaluation scores. There was no significant difference in discrepancy scores between male versus female residents (P =.94). Discrepancy scores among all PGYs were significantly different (P <.0001), with PGY1 tending to overrate the most, followed by PGY2. PGY3 and PGY4 underrated themselves on average compared to CCC ratings, with PGY4 having significantly lower self-ratings than CCC compared to any other PGY. In January, residents underscored themselves and in July residents overscored themselves compared to CCC (P <.0001 for both). Question types resulted in variable discrepancy scores, with SBP significantly lower than and PRO significantly higher than all other categories (P <.05 for both). Increases in RISE score correlated to increases in self- and CCC-scoring. These discrepancies can help trainees improve self-assessment. Discrepancies indicate potential areas for amelioration, such as curriculum adjustments or Milestone’s verbiage.
KW - Clinical Competency Committee
KW - Milestones
KW - faculty
KW - pathology
KW - residents
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85121400491&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85121400491&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/23742895211060526
DO - 10.1177/23742895211060526
M3 - Article
C2 - 34926794
AN - SCOPUS:85121400491
SN - 2374-2895
VL - 8
JO - Academic Pathology
JF - Academic Pathology
ER -