Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00680368

Resident Supervision Index: Assessing Feasibility and Validity

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
97 (actual)
Sponsor
US Department of Veterans Affairs · Federal
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

OBJECTIVES: To develop, assess feasibility, and test the validity of the Resident Supervision Index (RSI), a survey tool for medical residents designed to measure quantitatively the level of supervision the resident received while caring for an outpatient during a patient care encounter. RESEARCH DESIGN: This is a prospective trial assessing the Residency Supervision Index (Index) applied to outpatient care encounters for content validity, test-retest reliability, and construct validity.

Detailed description

OBJECTIVES: To develop, assess feasibility, and test the validity of the Resident Supervision Index (RSI), a survey tool for medical residents designed to measure quantitatively the level of supervision the resident received while caring for an outpatient during a patient care encounter. RESEARCH DESIGN: This is a prospective trial assessing the Residency Supervision Index (Index) applied to outpatient care encounters for test-retest reliability and construct validity. METHODOLOGY: Trained interviewers administered the Index during face-to-face and in-clinic interviews with 60 consenting resident physicians and their 37 consenting attending physicians to descsribe the care they provided to 143 patients at the outpatient clinics involving 148 clinical encounters at the Loma Linda VA Medical Center. For each encounter, data comes from administering the Resident Supervision Index to the resident and attending. Baseline data describing each subject (attending physicians and resident physicians) came from face-to-face interviews. Test-retest reliability is assessed by re-administering the Index to residents for within 24 hours of the encounter. Concurrent validity is assessed by re-administering the Index to the attending physician responsible for the patient's care. CLINICAL RELATIONSHIPS: The study will help our understanding of how residents at VA medical centers receive training and are supervised for the purpose of both education and patient outcomes. IMPACT/SIGNIFICANCE: The instrument is planned for future studies to assess the association between resident supervision and training outcomes, clinical workload, patient outcomes, quality of care, and care costs.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2008-03-01
Primary completion
2008-12-01
Completion
2008-12-01
First posted
2008-05-20
Last updated
2015-04-28
Results posted
2014-12-16

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00680368. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.