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Feasibility and preliminary validity evidence for remote video-based assessment of clinicians in a global health setting

BACKGROUND: Serious childhood illnesses (SCI), defined as severe pneumonia, severe dehydration, sepsis, and severe malaria, remain major contributors to amenable child mortality worldwide. Inadequate recognition and treatment of SCI are factors that impact child mortality in Botswana. Skills assessm...

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Autores principales: Smith, Katherine A., Setlhare, Segolame, DeCaen, Allan, Donoghue, Aaron, Mensinger, Janell L., Zhang, Bingqing, Snow, Brennan, Zambo, Dikai, Ndlovu, Kagiso, Littman-Quinn, Ryan, Bhanji, Farhan, Meaney, Peter A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6677291/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31374102
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220565
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author Smith, Katherine A.
Setlhare, Segolame
DeCaen, Allan
Donoghue, Aaron
Mensinger, Janell L.
Zhang, Bingqing
Snow, Brennan
Zambo, Dikai
Ndlovu, Kagiso
Littman-Quinn, Ryan
Bhanji, Farhan
Meaney, Peter A.
author_facet Smith, Katherine A.
Setlhare, Segolame
DeCaen, Allan
Donoghue, Aaron
Mensinger, Janell L.
Zhang, Bingqing
Snow, Brennan
Zambo, Dikai
Ndlovu, Kagiso
Littman-Quinn, Ryan
Bhanji, Farhan
Meaney, Peter A.
author_sort Smith, Katherine A.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Serious childhood illnesses (SCI), defined as severe pneumonia, severe dehydration, sepsis, and severe malaria, remain major contributors to amenable child mortality worldwide. Inadequate recognition and treatment of SCI are factors that impact child mortality in Botswana. Skills assessments of providers caring for SCI have not been validated in low and middle-income countries. OBJECTIVE: To establish preliminary inter-rater reliability, validity evidence, and feasibility for an assessment of providers who care for SCI using simulated patients and remote video capture in community clinic settings in Botswana. METHODS: This was a pilot study. Four scenarios were developed via a modified Delphi technique and implemented at primary care clinics in Kweneng, Botswana. Sessions were video captured and independently reviewed. Response process and internal structure analysis utilized intra-class correlation (ICC) and Fleiss’ Kappa. A structured log was utilized for feasibility of remote video capture. RESULTS: Eleven subjects participated. Scenarios of Lower Airway Obstruction (ICC = 0.925, 95%CI 0.695–0.998) and Hypovolemic Shock from Severe Dehydration (ICC = 0.892, 95%CI 0.596–0.997) produced excellent ICC among raters while Lower Respiratory Tract Infection (LRTI, ICC = 0, 95%CI -0.034–0.97) and LRTI + Distributive Shock from Sepsis (0.365, 95%CI -0.025–0.967) were poor. Oxygen therapy (0.707), arranging transport (0.706), and fluid administration (0.701) demonstrated substantial task reliability. CONCLUSIONS: Initial development of an assessment tool demonstrates many, but not all, criteria for validity evidence. Some scenarios and tasks demonstrate excellent reliability among raters, but others may be limited by manikin design and study implementation. Remote simulation assessment of some skills by clinic-based providers in global health settings is reliable and feasible.
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spelling pubmed-66772912019-08-06 Feasibility and preliminary validity evidence for remote video-based assessment of clinicians in a global health setting Smith, Katherine A. Setlhare, Segolame DeCaen, Allan Donoghue, Aaron Mensinger, Janell L. Zhang, Bingqing Snow, Brennan Zambo, Dikai Ndlovu, Kagiso Littman-Quinn, Ryan Bhanji, Farhan Meaney, Peter A. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Serious childhood illnesses (SCI), defined as severe pneumonia, severe dehydration, sepsis, and severe malaria, remain major contributors to amenable child mortality worldwide. Inadequate recognition and treatment of SCI are factors that impact child mortality in Botswana. Skills assessments of providers caring for SCI have not been validated in low and middle-income countries. OBJECTIVE: To establish preliminary inter-rater reliability, validity evidence, and feasibility for an assessment of providers who care for SCI using simulated patients and remote video capture in community clinic settings in Botswana. METHODS: This was a pilot study. Four scenarios were developed via a modified Delphi technique and implemented at primary care clinics in Kweneng, Botswana. Sessions were video captured and independently reviewed. Response process and internal structure analysis utilized intra-class correlation (ICC) and Fleiss’ Kappa. A structured log was utilized for feasibility of remote video capture. RESULTS: Eleven subjects participated. Scenarios of Lower Airway Obstruction (ICC = 0.925, 95%CI 0.695–0.998) and Hypovolemic Shock from Severe Dehydration (ICC = 0.892, 95%CI 0.596–0.997) produced excellent ICC among raters while Lower Respiratory Tract Infection (LRTI, ICC = 0, 95%CI -0.034–0.97) and LRTI + Distributive Shock from Sepsis (0.365, 95%CI -0.025–0.967) were poor. Oxygen therapy (0.707), arranging transport (0.706), and fluid administration (0.701) demonstrated substantial task reliability. CONCLUSIONS: Initial development of an assessment tool demonstrates many, but not all, criteria for validity evidence. Some scenarios and tasks demonstrate excellent reliability among raters, but others may be limited by manikin design and study implementation. Remote simulation assessment of some skills by clinic-based providers in global health settings is reliable and feasible. Public Library of Science 2019-08-02 /pmc/articles/PMC6677291/ /pubmed/31374102 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220565 Text en © 2019 Smith et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Smith, Katherine A.
Setlhare, Segolame
DeCaen, Allan
Donoghue, Aaron
Mensinger, Janell L.
Zhang, Bingqing
Snow, Brennan
Zambo, Dikai
Ndlovu, Kagiso
Littman-Quinn, Ryan
Bhanji, Farhan
Meaney, Peter A.
Feasibility and preliminary validity evidence for remote video-based assessment of clinicians in a global health setting
title Feasibility and preliminary validity evidence for remote video-based assessment of clinicians in a global health setting
title_full Feasibility and preliminary validity evidence for remote video-based assessment of clinicians in a global health setting
title_fullStr Feasibility and preliminary validity evidence for remote video-based assessment of clinicians in a global health setting
title_full_unstemmed Feasibility and preliminary validity evidence for remote video-based assessment of clinicians in a global health setting
title_short Feasibility and preliminary validity evidence for remote video-based assessment of clinicians in a global health setting
title_sort feasibility and preliminary validity evidence for remote video-based assessment of clinicians in a global health setting
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6677291/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31374102
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220565
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