• J Emerg Med · Jul 2015

    Multicenter Study

    Faculty Prediction of In-Training Examination Scores of Emergency Medicine Residents: A Multicenter Study.

    • Amer Z Aldeen, Erin N Quattromani, Kelly Williamson, Nicholas D Hartman, Natasha B Wheaton, and Jeremy B Branzetti.
    • Emergency Medicine Physicians, Ltd., Department of Emergency Medicine, Presence St. Joseph Medical Center, Joliet, Illinois.
    • J Emerg Med. 2015 Jul 1; 49 (1): 64-9.

    BackgroundThe Emergency Medicine In-Training Examination (EMITE) is one of the few validated instruments for medical knowledge assessment of emergency medicine (EM) residents. The EMITE is administered only once annually, with results available just 2 months before the end of the academic year. An earlier predictor of EMITE scores would be helpful for educators to institute timely remediation plans. A previous single-site study found that only 69% of faculty predictions of EMITE scores were accurate.ObjectiveThe goal of this article was to measure the accuracy with which EM faculty at five residency programs could predict EMITE scores for resident physicians.MethodsWe asked EM faculty at five different residency programs to predict the 2014 EMITE scores for all their respective resident physicians. The primary outcome was prediction accuracy, defined as the proportion of predictions within 6% of the actual scores. The secondary outcome was prediction precision, defined as the mean deviation of predictions from the actual scores. We assessed faculty background variables for correlation with the two outcomes.ResultsOne hundred and eleven faculty participated in the study (response rate 68.9%). Mean prediction accuracy for all faculty was 60.0%. Mean prediction precision was 6.3%. Participants were slightly more accurate at predicting scores of noninterns compared to interns. No faculty background variable correlated with the primary or secondary outcomes. Eight participants predicted scores with high accuracy (>80%).ConclusionsIn this multicenter study, EM faculty possessed only moderate accuracy at predicting resident EMITE scores. A very small subset of faculty members is highly accurate.Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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