Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byRudolf Carson Modified over 8 years ago
1
Enhancing Assessment – Experience from psychiatry Dr Andrew Brittlebank Associate Dean, RCPsych
2
What I’ll cover… Psychiatric culture Modifying the culture The results so far
3
“Competition can make people wary of assessment, and efforts to provide feedback on progress and attainment can unintentionally be seen as threatening...WPBA requires a change in culture” PMETB/AoMRC, 2009
4
The pre-MMC culture in psychiatry Supervision – Embedded Apprenticeship ‘see one, do one, teach one’? Assessment – High stake
5
Supervision Mandated since the 1970’s Inspected at college visits Variable degrees of compliance Embedded in psychiatry
6
Read about one, do one… “In Europe, being a psychiatric patient is a bit like being a passenger of a pilot who learned to fly by reading about it” Compernolle, 1998
7
High stake assessment MRCPsych examination – MCQ, essay, long case Supervisor report Appointment committees
8
Modifying the culture Patient safety MMC and training WPBA assessors Psychiatric skills should be coached
9
Patient safety Conversations with patient safety and experience teams – “How do you know your doctors are safe?” NHSLA – “It’s the economy, stupid”
10
Training in WPBA – since 2006 Reforms in medical education – Shift away from traditional apprenticeship Purpose of WPBA – Formative Tools The standards – Develop performance dimensions Observation – Assess what you see and what you hear Frame of reference – Peer discussions
11
Teaching psychiatric skills “Watching your trainee is a bit tiresome” People respect what you inspect – Renewed interest in teaching and learning psychiatric communication skills – Cascading examiner training – WPBA guides for Core and Advanced training
12
Results so far Participation Reliability Impact
13
Participation rates GMC Trainers’ Survey 2010 – Psychiatry WPBA
14
Reliability data for CbD Based on GeneralisabilityTheory Psychiatrists assess reliably
15
Impact Mixed picture Depends on the question and how it is asked
16
Impact of WPBA – qualitative Added burden for trainees: “It’s a hassle, getting people to do the assessments” Assessment drives learning: “It’s good to know where you stand, so you know what you have to do” As a tool for reflection: “It has been helpful to reflect on how much you think you’ve improved”
17
Impact of WPBA - quantitative Julyan, 2009 – May enhance effectiveness of supervision Menon et al, 2009 Concerns about the tools and practicalities Babu et al, 2009 – Positive view of training in WPBA – Mistrusted by trainees Menon et al, 2012 – Trainers more positive about WPBA’s than trainees – But trainers surveyed six months after trainees (2009)
18
In conclusion The introduction of WPBA demanded a change in practice and culture It is work in progress It takes time – five years minimum
19
Thank you! Questions?
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.