The use of EPA assessments in decision-making: Do supervision ratings correlate with other measures of clinical performance?

Med Teach. 2021 Nov;43(11):1323-1329. doi: 10.1080/0142159X.2021.1947480. Epub 2021 Jul 9.

Abstract

Background: Entrustable professional activities (EPAs) have been introduced as a framework for teaching and assessment in competency-based educational programs. With growing use, has come a call to examine the validity of EPA assessments. We sought to explore the correlation of EPA assessments with other clinical performance measures to support use of supervision ratings in decisions about medical students' curricular progression.

Methods: Spearman rank coefficients were used to determine correlation of supervision ratings from EPA assessments with scores on clerkship evaluations and performance on an end-of-clerkship-year Objective Structured Clinical Examination (CPX).

Results: Both overall clinical evaluation items score (rho 0.40; n = 166) and CPX patient encounter domain score (rho 0.31; n = 149) showed significant correlation with students' overall mean EPA supervision rating during the clerkship year. There was significant correlation between mean supervision rating for EPA assessments of history, exam, note, and oral presentation skills with scores for these skills on clerkship evaluations; less so on the CPX.

Conclusions: Correlation of EPA supervision ratings with commonly used clinical performance measures offers support for their use in undergraduate medical education. Data supporting the validity of EPA assessments promotes stakeholders' acceptance of their use in summative decisions about students' readiness for increased patient care responsibility.

Keywords: Clinical; clinical skills; medicine; undergraduate.

MeSH terms

  • Clinical Competence
  • Competency-Based Education
  • Education, Medical, Undergraduate*
  • Educational Measurement
  • Humans
  • Students, Medical*