Erschienen in:
01.05.2009 | Brief Report
Measuring Continuing Medical Education Outcomes: A Pilot Study of Effect Size of Three CME Interventions at an SGIM Annual Meeting
verfasst von:
Saul J. Weiner, MD, Jeffrey L. Jackson, MD, MPH, Sarajane Garten, MA
Erschienen in:
Journal of General Internal Medicine
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Ausgabe 5/2009
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Abstract
BACKGROUND
The ACCME is phasing in new criteria for accreditation from 2008 to 2012. These criteria require CME providers to assess the impact of their interventions.
OBJECTIVES
To assess the feasibility of measuring outcomes at a national meeting, the SGIM evaluation committee conducted a pilot assessment of two workshops and one precourse.
DESIGN AND PARTICIPANTS
Session coordinators prepared a five-item questionnaire to assess the knowledge and confidence of participants. The questionnaire was administered pre, immediately post, and 9 months after the educational sessions.
MEASUREMENTS
Changes in performance were calculated as a standardized difference, or effect size.
RESULTS
All three sessions demonstrated initial knowledge acquisition with effect sizes ranging from 0.39 (small) to 0.99 (large) immediately after the sessions. One session demonstrated sustainment of knowledge over the subsequent 9 months while the other two demonstrated decay. Confidence levels decreased following one of the sessions with an effect size of −0.72 (modest effect).
CONCLUSIONS
Effect size measurement of sessions provides quantitative information about their impact on learning and is one way to achieve ACCME compliance. The method, however, poses methodological and logistical challenges that raise questions about the feasibility of tracking learning and retention following a national meeting.