Assessing Early Performance in the Patient‐Doctor Relationship in Dental Education

In addition to current admissions criteria, the assessment of qualities related to humanistic medicine may help predict clinical and academic performance in dental education. The objective of this feasibility study was to develop and assess the reliability of a coding scheme to quantify and rate qua...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of dental education 2012-02, Vol.76 (2), p.159-167
Hauptverfasser: Kalenderian, Elsbeth, Maramaldi, Peter, Kinnunen, Taru H., Spinell, Diane, Nelson, Linda Pollak
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container_end_page 167
container_issue 2
container_start_page 159
container_title Journal of dental education
container_volume 76
creator Kalenderian, Elsbeth
Maramaldi, Peter
Kinnunen, Taru H.
Spinell, Diane
Nelson, Linda Pollak
description In addition to current admissions criteria, the assessment of qualities related to humanistic medicine may help predict clinical and academic performance in dental education. The objective of this feasibility study was to develop and assess the reliability of a coding scheme to quantify and rate qualitative formative narratives describing individual student performance in a medical interview course that utilizes principles of humanistic medicine. A mixed method, using focus groups and individual interviews, was used to develop a coding strategy. Three coders retrospectively rated 209 formative narratives evaluating first‐year students at the Harvard School of Dental Medicine to determine high and low performance in this course. Interrater reliability was tested. The focus groups yielded the use of superlatives to identify high performance, with their absence indicating low performance. This study found a high level of calibration among independent coders (Cronbach's alpha 0.75). Twenty‐four (11.5 percent) of the narrative evaluations were coded as “high performers” and seven (3.3 percent) as “low performers.” The results demonstrate the feasibility of quantifying narrative evaluations to determine high and low performance in a patient‐centered course for dental students. It may be that humanistic qualities taught in a patient‐centered medical interview course are more significant competencies than previously thought.
doi_str_mv 10.1002/j.0022-0337.2012.76.2.tb05242.x
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source MEDLINE; Wiley Online Library All Journals
subjects Analysis of Variance
dental education
dental students
Dentist-Patient Relations
Dentistry
Education, Dental - methods
Educational Measurement - methods
Feasibility Studies
Focus Groups
formative evaluations
humanistic medicine
Humans
interrater reliability
Interviews as Topic
narrative medicine
Patient-Centered Care - methods
patient‐centered
Pilot Projects
Qualitative Research
Reproducibility of Results
student performance
title Assessing Early Performance in the Patient‐Doctor Relationship in Dental Education
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