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Evaluating Medical Students' Skills in Obtaining Informed Consent for HIV Testing
Author(s) -
Weiss Roberts Laura,
Geppert Cynthia,
Carty Teresita,
Scott Obenshain S.
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
journal of general internal medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.746
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 1525-1497
pISSN - 0884-8734
DOI - 10.1046/j.1525-1497.2003.10835.x
Subject(s) - medicine , informed consent , checklist , competence (human resources) , inter rater reliability , family medicine , likert scale , medical education , clinical psychology , alternative medicine , psychology , rating scale , social psychology , pathology , developmental psychology , cognitive psychology
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate fourth‐year medical students' abilities to obtain informed consent or refusal for HIV testing through a performance‐based evaluation method. DESIGN: Student competence was assessed in a standardized patient interaction in which the student obtained informed consent or refusal for HIV testing. A previously validated 16‐item checklist was completed by the standardized patient. A subset was independently reviewed and scored by a faculty member to calculate interrater reliability for this report. Student feedback on the assessment was elicited. SETTING: School of Medicine at the University of New Mexico. PATIENTS/PARTICIPANTS: All senior medical students in the class of 2000 were included. INTERVENTIONS: A 10‐minute standardized patient interaction was administered within the context of a formal comprehensive performance assessment. MEASUREMENTS and MAIN RESULTS: Seventy‐nine students participated, and most (96%) demonstrated competence on the station. For the 15 specific items, the mean score was 25.5 out of 30 possible points (range, 13 to 30; SD, 3.5) on the checklist. A strong positive correlation ( r s = .79) was found between the total score on the 15 Likert‐scaled items and the score in response to the global item, “I would return to this clinician” (mean, 3.5; SD, 1.0). Scores given by the standardized patients and the faculty rater were well correlated. The station was generally well received by students, many of whom were stimulated to pursue further learning. CONCLUSIONS: This method of assessing medical students' abilities to obtain informed consent or refusal for HIV testing can be translated to a variety of clinical settings. Such efforts may help in demonstrating competence in performing key ethics skills and may help ensure ethically sound clinical care for people at risk for HIV infection.

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