Evaluating structured assessment of anaesthesiologists' non-technical skills.

Acta Anaesthesiol Scand

Danish Institute for Medical Simulation (DIMS), Herlev Hospital, Capital Region of Denmark and University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.

Published: July 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Non-technical skills are crucial for anesthesiologists to ensure patient safety and care quality, and the study aimed to validate the Anaesthesiologists' Non-Technical Skills in Denmark (ANTSdk) assessment tool.
  • The research involved a group of 19 anesthesiologists who evaluated trainees' NTS before and after a training session, showing significant inter-rater reliability and consistency in their ratings.
  • The findings suggest that ANTSdk is a practical assessment tool for NTS in anesthesia training, though areas like self-awareness and decision reassessment need further focus in training programs.

Article Abstract

Background: Non-technical skills (NTS) are essential for safe and efficient anaesthesia. Assessment instruments with appropriate validity evidence can be used to ensure that anaesthesiologists possess the NTS necessary to deliver high-standard patient care. The aims were to collect validity evidence using a contemporary validity framework for the assessment instrument Anaesthesiologists' Non-Technical Skills in Denmark (ANTSdk) regarding response process and internal structure (including reliability), and to investigate the effect of rater training on these properties.

Methods: An explorative study was undertaken at the Danish Institute for Medical Simulation, Copenhagen, Denmark. In a 1-day session, using ANTSdk, a convenience sample of 19 anaesthesiologists rated trainee anaesthesiologists' NTS in nine video-recorded simulation scenarios before and after a 3-h training session.

Results: Response process evidence: participants considered ANTSdk useful and feasible for NTS assessment. Internal structure evidence: inter-rater reliability (single measures) largely expressed substantial agreement (ICC ≥ 0.55 and ICC ≥ 0.60 for pre- and post-training ratings respectively). Strong internal consistency of ratings was found (Spearman's correlation coefficient ≥ 0.82). Accuracy of participants' ratings compared with reference ratings (± 1 scale point) was notable (76% and 78% for pre- and post-training ratings, respectively). The results indicate that the elements 'Demonstrating self-awareness', 'Reassessing decisions', 'Assessing competencies', and 'Supporting others' need more attention in future rater training.

Conclusion: The validity evidence collected on content, response process, and internal structure, suggests that ANTSdk is easy to use on video-recorded simulation scenarios, indicating that ANTSdk is a feasible instrument for NTS assessment during anaesthesia training.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/aas.12709DOI Listing

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