A video-based situational judgement test of medical students' communication competence in patient encounters: Development and first evaluation

Patient Educ Couns. 2022 May;105(5):1283-1289. doi: 10.1016/j.pec.2021.08.020. Epub 2021 Aug 24.

Abstract

Objective: We developed and evaluated the Video-Based Assessment of Medical Communication Competence (VA-MeCo), a construct-driven situational judgement test measuring medical students' communication competence in patient encounters.

Methods: In the construction phase, we conducted two expert studies (npanel1 = 6, npanel2 = 13) to ensure curricular and content validity and sufficient expert agreement on the answer key. In the evaluation phase, we conducted a cognitive pre-test (n = 12) and a pilot study (n = 117) with medical students to evaluate test usability and acceptance, item statistics and test reliability depending on the applied scoring method (raw consensus vs. pairwise comparison scoring).

Results: The results of the expert interviews indicated good curricular and content validity. Expert agreement on the answer key was high (ICCs> .86). The pilot study showed favourable usability and acceptance by students. Irrespective of the scoring method, reliability for the complete test (Cronbach's α >.93) and its subscales (α >.83) was high.

Conclusion: There is promising evidence that medical communication competence can be validly and reliably measured using a construct-driven and video-based situational judgement test.

Practice implications: Video-based SJTs allow efficient online assessment of medical communication competence and are well accepted by students and educators.

Keywords: Basic communication skills; Construct-driven development; Medical education; Situational judgement test; Video-based assessment.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Clinical Competence
  • Communication
  • Education, Medical, Undergraduate* / methods
  • Educational Measurement / methods
  • Humans
  • Judgment
  • Pilot Projects
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Students, Medical* / psychology